Dedicated to women's health and well-being

News

Lifelong Exercise Keeps Seniors Young at Heart

Lifelong Exercise Keeps Seniors Young at Heart

November 18, 2009 - 5:33pm 454 reads 0 comments

WEDNESDAY, Nov. 18 (HealthDay News) -- Lifelong exercise helps seniors keep their hearts healthy, new research shows.

The study included healthy people over age 65 -- without chronic diseases such as diabetes or high blood pressure -- who were recruited from another study in which they'd been reporting their weekly physical activity for the previous 15 to 25 years.

For the new study, the participants underwent cardiopulmonary stress tests, ultrasounds of the heart and blood vessels, and other tests to assess heart health.

The more exercise participants had done during their lives (as measured by the number of days per week of exercise training), the more likely they were to have preserved the youthful characteristics of their heart, said Dr. Paul Bhella, of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, and colleagues.

For example, those who exercised four to five times a week during their lives had about 54 percent of the benefit seen in "Master" athletes, while those who exercised two to three times a week had 42 percent of the benefit.

Master athletes are seniors who've exercised six to seven times a week for 15 to 25 years and retained 100 percent of their heart's youthful characteristics and have hearts similar to those of 30-year-olds.

The study was scheduled to be presented Wednesday at the American Heart Association's annual meeting in Orlando, Fla.

In other research presented at the meeting, researchers found that stem cell therapy improves heart function, exercise ability and outcomes in patients with severely enlarged hearts caused by dilated cardiomyopathy and normal coronary arteries.

Patients in this study underwent a procedure in which bone marrow-derived stem cells were delivered to the injured area of their heart muscle. The patients' heart dimension and function, exercise capacity and markers of heart failure progression were measured before and every three months after the stem cell therapy.

One year later, survival of patients treated with stem cells was 93 percent compared with 70 percent for patients who didn't have stem cell therapy.

Add A New Comment

Start Asking & Sharing



Add A New CommentComments

There are no comments yet. Be the first to get the conversation started.

Log in

Are you a member? Log in first to track your posts

Not a member? Join us. Membership is not required to post.

More information about formatting options

We never share email addresses with third parties. Your email address will be used to notify you of activity on your post and send you our newsletter if you choose to sign up for it.
Verify that you are a human (not a computer):
This is necessary to prevent computer programs from automatically posting spam or other irrelevant content on EmpowHER.com. Enter the characters in the box to the left (case sensitive). Do not enter spaces between the characters.
Image CAPTCHA

What Do YOU Think? We want to know so we can help!

Poll
With last week's poll in mind, have *you* ever fibbed about how often you have sex with your spouse or partner?:
View Results

Free Weekly Newsletter

Sign up for EmpowHER's weekly newsletter

Health Events Search for health related events in your area

Walgreens Take Care Clinic - Phoenix

Provided by Walgreens

Welcome to Take Care Clinic We're here to bring everyday family healthcare to your neighborhood drug store. No appointments, no long waits, open 7 days a week and weeknights too. Most insurance welcome. It's personalized attention when you need it.

When:
February 20, 2010, 9:30am - 5:00pm
Where:
3450 W. Dunlap Road
3450 W. Dunlap Road
Phoenix, AZ  85051