Too
old? Too slow? No! Debut marathoners may add years to life
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[January 07, 2020]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - First-time marathon
runners can add years to their lives and reap the health rewards of
lower blood pressure and healthier arteries, even if they take on the
challenge in mid- to later life, research showed on Monday.
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"It appears to never be too late," said co-lead researcher Charlotte
Manisty of University College London.
The Marathon Study showed the biggest health gains were in slower,
older men who also had relatively high blood pressure when training
began, though the researchers said it was not clear why they
benefited most.
In the study, published in the Journal of the American College of
Cardiology, Manisty's team looked at 138 first-time marathon runners
from the 2016 and 2017 London Marathon.
On average, the new runners were 37 years old and 49% were male, and
were not running for more than two hours per week before the study
began. The average marathon time at the end of the study was 5.4
hours for women and 4.5 hours for men.
The scientists examined the participants before training and after
they had completed the 26.2-mile (42 km) event to see if
successfully taking on a marathon had affected their levels of
arterial stiffening.
Hardening of the arteries is a normal part of aging. It increases
the risk of cardiovascular diseases such as stroke and heart attack
and related conditions which are also linked to dementia and kidney
disease.
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The first-time marathon runners in the study saw, on average, a
decrease in arterial stiffness equivalent to a four-year reduction
in their 'arterial age', and a drop in systolic (when heart muscles
contract) and diastolic (when the muscles relax) blood pressure of 4
and 3mmHg respectively.
The findings show "it is possible to reverse the consequences of
aging on our blood vessels with real-world exercise in just six
months", Manisty said.
"These were not people who were doing extreme levels of exercise or
losing extreme amounts of weight. They were doing moderate training
and reaching realistic running goals," she added in a telephone
interview.
Metin Avkiran, a director at the British Heart Foundation charity
which co-funded the research, said in a statement that the results
showed the "undeniable" benefits of exercise.
"As the old mantra goes, if exercise were a pill it would be hailed
as a wonder drug," he said.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland, editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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