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News and Updates Exercise fights Alzheimer's "Regular exercise at least three times a week could delay the onset and reduce the risk of developing Alzheimer's, and the more frail a person is, the more he or she is gong to benefit from exercise," said lead author Dr Eric B. Larson, director of the Group Health Cooperative's Centre for Health Studies in Seattle. "So use it even after you start to lose it - that's the banner headline," he added. "There's a tendency to sit down and do nothing when you start to lose function, but the opposite is probably exactly what's in order if you want to stave off Alzheimer's disease." How the
study was conducted All the patients were members of a Seattle-based health-maintenance organisation. None had been diagnosed with dementia or were living in a nursing home at the start of the study. Every two years, the researchers used examinations and in-person interviews to evaluate participants' weekly exercise routines; physical abilities such as walking, standing, balancing, and gripping; memory, attentiveness, and concentration skills; and smoking, drinking and dietary supplement habits. Reporting in the January 17 Annals of Internal Medicine, they noted that 107 participants went on to develop Alzheimer's within six years of the study. Another 51 patients developed other forms of dementia, while 276 participants died during the course of the study. Risk reduced
by 32% Exercise might not eliminate the chance of developing Alzheimer's or other forms of dementia altogether, the researchers noted. However, physical activity may help delay dementia onset by a number of years, they said. Walking, hiking, bicycling, aerobics, callisthenics, swimming, water aerobics, weight training and stretching were all considered valid exercise activities. However, the authors did not measure exercise intensity, and physically taxing habits that had been conducted at the workplace or while completing non-leisure chores were also not assessed. Other factors, such as educational achievement, alcohol consumption, smoking and dietary supplement use did not affect dementia risk, the study found. Most useful
for the unfit Larson and his colleagues called for future studies to explore the intensity and duration of exercise that would best improve circulation and oxygen delivery while reducing brain cell loss - all of which they suspect accounts for the resulting drop in dementia risk. May motivate
people to exercise Greg M. Cole is a neuroscientist with the greater Los Angeles VA Healthcare System and the associate director of the Alzheimer's Disease Research Centre at the University of California, Los Angeles. He expressed great enthusiasm for the study. "I've been waiting for somebody to determine whether or not exercise can affect the onset of Alzheimer's," he said. "It's critically important, and it fits in well with what we already know." "Reducing cholesterol with statins, reducing high-saturated fat intake, increasing mega-fatty acid intake, lowering blood pressure - controlling all those factors seems to reduce our risk for Alzheimer's," he added. "And exercise now appears to be another one of those things. And it's really doable. People can apply it directly. So this is really great."
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