Sunday, January 24, 2010

Let's get physical: Nine facts about fitness - New Scientist


Let's get physical: Nine facts about fitness - New Scientist

New Scientist is launched into the mailbox every week and every week it teaches me something new.

What counts as Exercise ? The standard is now 150 minutes a week of moderate intensity.

So what is moderate intensity ? For most people it means walking at 100 steps a minute. This gets you to 3 METS - the lowest level to qualify as moderate.

So what is a MET ? 1 MET is when you are lying flat doing nothing i.e. just about as low energy as it gets.

3 METS means burning 3 times as much energy as the 1 MET state.

Moderate intensity is between 3 and 6 METS.

So what is 6 METS ? A slow jog should get you to 6 METS.

Click on the link to New Scientist and learn much more and if you want to be amused read the comments at the bottom of the article because a long discussion broke out about how to cheat New Scientist and evade some of their rules.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Vigorous Exercise _ Good for the Brain


Reuters carried this story about vigorous exercise improving the aging brain. One question that the writer, Megan Brooks put to Dr Laura Baker, the leading researcher on the study was "Might it be possible to get the same brain benefit from lower intensity aerobic exercise?". My thought was "Why take a chance ?" If you know vigorous exercise will push back the impact of an aging brain, why take the chance of just doing the minimum intensity.

Exercise protects and improves the aging brain

Fri Jan 15, 2010 3:32pm EST

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Two new studies provide more evidence that regular aerobic exercise not only staves off the problems with thinking and memory that often come with age, but it can actually help turn back the clock on brain aging.

Health

In one study, researchers found evidence that engaging in moderate physical activity such as brisk walking, swimming, or yoga in midlife or later may cut the risk of developing mild thinking problems.

In the other study, a group of elderly individuals who already had mild problems had improvements in their mental agility after six months of high-intensity aerobic activity.

People with mild mental impairments of the kind studied - known as mild cognitive impairment -- typically have some memory difficulties, such as forgetting people's names or misplacing items. Each year, 10 to 15 percent of individuals with mild cognitive impairment will develop dementia, as compared with 1 percent to 2 percent of the general population. Previous studies in animals and humans have suggested that exercise may improve thinking and memory.

To investigate further, Seattle-based researchers studied 33 adults with mild cognitive impairment. Twenty-three spent 45 to 60 minutes on a treadmill or stationary bicycle four days a week for six months, while the other 10 "control" subjects did stretching exercises but kept their heart rate low.

Six months of intense aerobic exercise "improved cognitive abilities of attention and concentration, organization, planning, and multi-tasking," study chief Dr. Laura Baker noted in an email to Reuters Health. In contrast, cognitive function test scores continued to decline in the group that didn't have vigorous exercise.

Might it be possible to get the same brain benefit from lower intensity aerobic exercise?

"In theory, yes," Baker said, "but we are just now starting the studies that will help us know how little is enough. In the next five years, we'll have a much better idea about the minimum 'dose' of exercise needed (how often, duration of exercise sessions, how much exertion is needed) without compromising the cognitive benefits."

Baker, who is from the University of Washington School of Medicine and the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center, also noted that the average magnitude of mental improvement with aerobic exercise was "bigger for women than for men."

And while she's not exactly sure why, she noted that, for the women in the study, aerobic exercise improved the body's sensitivity to insulin, a hormone that plays an important role in providing energy to the muscles and organs of the body and to the brain. "Contrary to our expectations, aerobic exercise did not improve insulin sensitivity for the men," Baker said.

EXERCISE TO WARD OFF MENTAL DECLINE

The other study, by Dr. Yonas E. Geda and colleagues at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, involved 1,324 elderly adults free of dementia in 2006-2008. Experts determined that 198 had mild cognitive impairment and 1,126 had normal cognitive function.

Those who said they had engaged in moderate exercise such as brisk walking, aerobics, yoga, strength training or swimming in their 40s, 50s and beyond were less apt to have mild cognitive impairment, the researchers found.

Moderate exercise in midlife was associated with a 39 percent reduced likelihood of developing mild cognitive impairment, and moderate exercise in late life was associated with a 32 percent reduction in the odds of mental decline. The findings were consistent among men and women.

These two studies, both published in the Archives of Neurology, contribute to a growing body of literature supporting the benefits of a physically active lifestyle on the brain.

SOURCE: Archives of Neurology, January 2010.


HBO: Documentaries: The Alzheimer's Project: Watch the Films: The Supplementary Series: Identifying Mild Cognitive Impairment

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Saturday, January 16, 2010

Running 10K at 66



No. 1 Health Objective for 2010 - Run a 10K event - 6.2 miles in less than 60 minutes.

Can I still do it ? Only time will tell.

Why ? I just like the feeling that running gives me and running seems a healthy activity - maybe the healthiest. Runners who keep running into old age seem to do better every possible way compared to people who stop running (and many times better than those who have never pushed their bodies hard). Read the report on a study of runners (and the control group of non-runners) which has now been on-going for over 20 years. At the start everyone was at least 50 years old and by now they have progressed into their '70s and older.

So I want to run 10K (6.2 miles) in under an hour before the end of 2010. What can I achieve right now ? I can run 10K on a treadmill in 62 minutes. Not bad but a long way short of objective because running on a treadmill is easier than running on the road and that's what I need to do at a running event.
This is my plan for 2010:

1) Increase endurance so that 10K is easy not really hard - target to achieve a long run 0f 15K i.e. 50% above race distance

2) Run 10K on a treadmill in 59 minutes by gradually over time increasing running pace.

3) Add a 1% incline to the treadmill to start to replicate running outside compared to on a treadmill and try to get to 59 minutes.

4) Run 5K on the road with a target time of less than 28 minutes.

5) Run 10K to see where I stand time wise.

This leads to the big question. How to improve my running time. I need to be able to run 10K at least 5 minutes faster on the treadmill than I can currently manage.

An important running concept is VO2max

There are two ways to go:
- hard, fast intervals
- long, slow distance.

After reading the long article by Seiler and Tønnessen I'm going to start train with long slow distance. This means running a lot at below race pace.

The body adapts to endurance training by:

a) increasing the flow of blood to leg muscles by growing additional tiny blood vessels all the way to the muscle fibers so that oxygen carried in red blood corpuscles has as short a distance as possible to get to the muscles that need oxygen. Lots of long, slow distance encourage the body to become more efficient at running distance. This is called peripheral adaptation.

b) encourage the heart to produce stronger contractions, to eject a bigger fraction of the blood in the heart at every contraction and to increase the diameter of major blood vessels close to the heart. This is central adaptation.

Central adaptation needs faster running pace taking heart rate up close to maximum. More on this over the months after I make good progress with long, slow distance.

Our species probably evolved to run and that might be why running seems to be the healthy activity and it might even encourage a larger brain.

Of course, one can dream about running distance in the Kenya mountains - enjoy this video.




Thursday, January 7, 2010

I'm a Boniva man - once a month (last Sunday in the month - unless there are 5 Sunday's when it becomes the second to last Sunday). I've read the long, long document wrapped up with the tablets but I was surprised, no amazed when reading Jane Brody's piece in the New York Times this week "Options for Bone Loss, but I'm no Magic Pill."

The whole piece is very interesting but these 2 points grabbed my attention:

1. . . . the most disturbing side effect of these drugs has been a growing number of patients who experience an otherwise uncommon injury — a low-trauma fracture of the thigh bone or other major bone — and a delay in healing or complete failure of a fracture to heal, especially after many years on bisphosphonates. It is believed that in slowing bone turnover, the drugs may impede the repair of normally occurring microfractures and eventually result in a major fracture.

2. These side effects have prompted a warning that after five years on bisphosphonates, people should take a break from the drugs for at least a year.

So I went back and read that long, long screed termed Highlights of Prescribing Information and the take a break after 5 years is no where to be seen. I have no reason to disbelieve Jane Brody so I have to think that long, long screed inside the Boniva pack is "light" on information.

If you are wondering what osteoporosis exactly looks like, click on the image below to see Dr Susan Ott's collection of bone images from her web site on osteoporosis and bone physiology.



Sunday, January 3, 2010

Knee Cartilage and Vitamin D

I'm back to running 12 to 15 miles a week and I've been just a tad surprised that my knees have not been hurting non-stop but I've given all the thanks to my knee lubrication in 2008. However increasing my Vitamin D intake might well have been helping as well.

The research, in Tasmania, Australia, looked at men and women aged 51 to 79 years with an average of 61 years. This is right in my age range and hence the interest.

The paper has the title Serum levels of vitamin D, sunlight exposure, and knee cartilage loss in older adults: The Tasmanian older adult cohort study

Dr. Changhai Ding is a long time researcher on cartilage, osteoarthritis and knees (look at his long list of research papers) said "Cartilage loss is the hallmark of osteoarthritis."

I've increased my Vitamin D intake up to 3,000 IU's a day and hopefully this has increased the level of
serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25 OHD] . The research was carried out in Tasmania, Australia and maybe that was why the mean 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25 OHD] baseline was 52.6 nmol/L - the sunny climate gave high Vitamin D levels. In northern climates a Vitamin D level of 30 nmol/L and up is seen as normal.

The next thing to do is to get my Vitamin D level measured to find out if my less painful knees are related to much higher Vitamin D levels (bearing in mind my levels were around 30 nmol/L in April 2009).

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