Walking more and losing weight can improve mobility as much as 20 percent in older, obese adults with poor cardiovascular health, according to a new Wake Forest University study.
The results from the five-year study of 288 participants appear online Jan. 24 in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
The combination of weight loss and physical activity is what works best. These findings run counter to the commonly held belief that it is unhealthy for older adults to lose weight.
“To improve mobility, physical activity has to be coupled with weight loss,” said Jack Rejeski, Thurman D. Kitchin Professor of Health and Exercise Science. “This is one of the first large studies to show that weight loss improves the functional health of older people with cardiovascular disease.”
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Science Daily
Walking more and losing weight can improve mobility as much as 20 percent in older, obese adults with poor cardiovascular health, according to a new Wake Forest University study.
The results from the five-year study of 288 participants appear online Jan. 24 in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
The combination of weight loss and physical activity is what works best. These findings run counter to the commonly held belief that it is unhealthy for older adults to lose weight.
“To improve mobility, physical activity has to be coupled with weight loss,” said Jack Rejeski, Thurman D. Kitchin Professor of Health and Exercise Science. “This is one of the first large studies to show that weight loss improves the functional health of older people with cardiovascular disease.”
read the rest of this article from Science Daily - click here