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Fitness predicts longevity in Older Adults
Being physically fit after age 60 helps you live longer,
regardless of your body’s fat content,
according to a new study.
Although earlier research had suggested that obesity and low
physical fitness each can increase the risk
of dying during middle age, it was unclear
whether this was also true in later years.
In a new report from an ongoing study, Dr. Xuemei Sui of the
University of South Carolina and her
colleagues examined the links between
fitness, fatness and mortality in older
adults.
The scientists looked at more than 2,600 men and women, age
60 or older, who were participating in the
Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study, funded
by NIH’s National Institute on Aging (NIA)
and National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute
(NHLBI). Participants walked on a treadmill
to determine their fitness levels.
Their fat levels, or adiposity, were assessed by measuring
their waist circumference, percent body fat
and body mass index (a ratio of weight to
height). The results were reported in the
December 5, 2007, issue of the Journal of
the American Medical Association.
During an average follow-up period of 12 years, 450 of the
participants died. They were generally
older, had lower fitness levels and had more
cardiovascular risk factors, such as high
blood pressure, high cholesterol and
diabetes, than survivors. The percent of
body fat did not appear to be related to the
risk of dying. However, greater fitness,
lower body mass index and lower waist
circumference each reduced the risk of
death.
The researchers grouped the participants into 5 categories
based on their fitness levels. The least-fit
group had a death rate 4 times higher than
the fittest.
Even those in the low-fitness group fared much better than
the least-fit; the least-fit participants
were twice as likely to die as those in the
low-fitness group. In most cases, the death
rates for those with higher fitness levels
were less than half of the rates for those
who were least fit but weighed similar
amounts.
The researchers say their findings suggest that you don’t
need to be thin to benefit from regular
physical activity. Regular activity—like
brisk walking for at least 30 minutes most
days of the week—will keep most older adults
out of the lowest fitness category and
possibly help prolong their lives. A key to
healthy aging is being physically active,
regardless of your weight.