Researchers asked 1,622 adults ranging in age from 60 to 64 years
old to wear movement and heart rate monitors for five days. These
sensors detected how much time people spent sedentary and also how
much of participants' active time involved light activities like
walking or gardening versus moderate-to-vigorous workouts like
cycling or dancing.
Researchers also tested participants' blood for levels of certain
biomarkers that can help predict the risk of atherosclerosis, or
hardening of the arteries that can cause heart attacks and strokes.
Biomarkers in the blood indicating elevated levels of inflammation,
cholesterol and clotting can be an early warning of atherosclerosis
and heart disease.
"We found that increased sedentary time was associated with worse
levels of these biomarkers whereas increased time spent in any
intensity of activity (including both light and higher intensity
activity) was associated with better levels," said lead study author
Ahmed Elhakeem of the University of Bristol.
"The 60 to 64 age range represents an important transition between
work and retirement, when lifestyle behaviors tend to change,"
Elhakeen said by email. "It may, therefore, be an opportunity to
promote increased physical activity."
Overall, half of the study participants spent at least 18 hours a
day either asleep or sedentary, researchers report in the Journal of
the American Heart Association.
Women spent a bit more time engaged in light physical activity, and
men spent slightly longer doing vigorous exercise.
Half of the women spent at least 5.4 hours doing low-intensity
activities, compared with 5.2 hours for the men. Half of the men
spent at least 0.7 hours doing moderate-to-vigorous exercise,
compared to 0.4 hours for the women.
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For men, each additional 10 minutes of sedentary time was associated
with 0.6 percent higher levels of interleukin 6 (IL-6), a protein in
the blood that can indicate inflammation. Every extra 10 minutes
women spent sedentary was associated with 1.4 percent higher IL-6
levels.
Each additional 10 minutes of light activity for both men and women
was associated with 0.8 percent lower levels of a protein known as
tissue-plasminogen-activator (t-PA) that can signal the presence of
blood clots.
The study wasn't designed to prove whether or how exercise levels
might directly influence biomarkers of heart disease.
To improve overall cardiovascular health, the American Heart
Association suggests at least 150 minutes a week of moderate
intensity or 75 minutes a week of vigorous-intensity aerobic
physical activity (or a combination of the two) and
muscle-strengthening exercises two or more days a week.
For the most benefit, however, people need to get active and stay
active, said Dr. Nieca Goldberg, medical director of the Joan H.
Tisch Center for Women's Health at NYU Langone Health in New York
City.
"You can't bank your past physical activity," Goldberg, who wasn't
involved in the study, said by email. "Physical activity lowers
heart disease risk while you are actively participating in the
physical activity."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2OpQ7td Journal of the American Heart
Association, online August 8, 2018.
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