Researchers followed thousands of men over several decades,
periodically drawing blood to test their cholesterol and then making
them run on treadmills to measure their cardiorespiratory fitness.
Men who could run longer and faster – signs that their bodies more
easily deliver oxygen to muscles – also had lower cholesterol.
"The benefits of physical fitness in improving cholesterol levels
are greatest in young to middle-age adults and tend to decrease
gradually with older age," said Dr. Usman Baber, a cardiovascular
researcher at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New
York City.
"These findings should reinforce the importance of young to
middle-age men incorporating regular aerobic exercise as part of a
healthy lifestyle," Baber, co-author of an editorial accompanying
the study in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, said
in an email to Reuters Health.
To understand the link between fitness and cholesterol levels,
researchers studied data collected for 11,418 men between 1970 and
2006 at a clinic in Dallas. Most participants were white,
college-educated and relatively well off financially.
Men were excluded from the analysis if they had a history of heart
attack, stroke or cancer at any point during the study period, or if
they reported having elevated cholesterol or triglycerides during
clinic visits.
On average, each man had at least three exams testing cholesterol
and fitness levels.
The better men did on fitness tests, the more likely they were to
have lower total cholesterol, as well as lower levels of what's
known as low-density lipoprotein (LDL), the bad kind of cholesterol
that builds up in blood vessels and can lead to atherosclerosis,
blood clots and heart attacks.
Fitter men also had higher levels of so-called high-density
lipoprotein (HDL), the good cholesterol that helps purge the
bloodstream of LDL.
Men with higher cardiorespiratory fitness levels had better
cholesterol profiles than less fit men from their early 20s until at
least their early 60s, though the difference diminished with older
age.
At the same time, men with lower fitness levels reached abnormal
cholesterol levels before age 40.
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One limitation of the study is that it lacked data on
cholesterol-lowering medications and didn't track changes in eating
habits that might impact cholesterol, the researchers acknowledge.
There was also limited data for the oldest men in the study.
Even so, the current study adds to a growing body of evidence
supporting the benefits of lifelong physical activity in preventing
diseases that tend to develop with age, said Dr. Paola Boffetta, a
researcher at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and
co-author of the editorial.
"There is very strong evidence that being active is beneficial
throughout life not only for cardiovascular disease but for a very
large number of chronic diseases and for osteoporosis and
fractures," Boffetta told Reuters Health.
To achieve the fitness levels necessary to ward off age-related high
cholesterol, men should get 150 minutes a week of moderate activity
or 75 minutes of vigorous activity, said study co-author Dr. Xuemei
Sui, a researcher in exercise science at the Arnold School of Public
Health at the University of South Carolina. These activities might
include walking, running, swimming or cycling.
"It does not matter how old men are when they exercise; they can
benefit at any stage," Sui said in an email. "Of course, the younger
they start exercise, the later the onset of high cholesterol,
especially before 60 years old when cholesterol tends to increase
with aging."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1QGdmuC http://bit.ly/1E46Pkv Journal of the
American College of Cardiology, online May 11, 2015.
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