Vigorous exercise can greatly reduce your risk of cancer, heart disease

Monitoring Desk

TORONTO: Women who can exercise at a higher intensity during a heart stress test are less likely to die from heart disease, cancer, and other causes, say the authors of a new study.

Scotty Butcher, PhD, an associate professor of physical therapy at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon, Canada, said these findings are “right in line” with other research looking at the impact of fitness level on the risk of dying from these kinds of conditions.

It’s no surprise that exercise is good for your health, but does the new study mean that all women should take up more vigorous exercise like running, swimming laps, or kickboxing?

Not necessarily. There are many ways to increase your fitness level. Still, for some women, higher-intensity workouts can be a great option.

Exercise capacity linked to lower risk of dying

In the new study, researchers looked at two groups of women — those with good exercise capacity and those with poor exercise capacity.

Women with good exercise capacity were able to exercise at an intensity of 10 metabolic equivalents (METs) or better during a stress echocardiogram.

MET level is a measure of how much energy is burned during an activity — it’s also a proxy for the intensity of a physical activity.

Anything over 6 METs is considered vigorous exercise. Running a 10-minute mile is about 10 METs. Mountain biking uphill is 14 METs.

Researchers found that women with poor exercise capacity were almost four times more likely to die from cardiovascular disease compared to women with good exercise capacity.

Poor exercisers were also twice as likely to die from cancer and more than four times as likely to die from other causes, compared to women with a higher fitness level.

The study was presented December 7 at EuroEcho 2019, a scientific meeting of the European Society of Cardiology. The results have not been published yet in a peer-reviewed journal, so should be viewed with some caution.

Most of the women in the study were between 50 and 75 years old. Researchers followed the women on average for about 5 years.

While the study found that having a higher exercise capacity is a good thing, the researchers didn’t look at what women did to reach that level of fitness.

“MET level on the test used in this study is simply a marker of maximal capacity, not necessarily of ‘vigorous exercise’ training,” said Butcher.

So the study gives an idea of how fit the women were, but we don’t know how intensely they trained — or what physical activities they did.

Benefits of vigorous exercise

While many types of exercise lead to greater fitness, there are advantages to maxing out your effort, even if just for a few minutes at a time.

Ken Seldeen, PhD, a research assistant professor of medicine at the University at Buffalo’s Jacobs School of Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, said the body responds to exercise in a way that prepares it for similar challenges in the future.

“Vigorous exercise simply challenges the body more so than moderate exercise, and the response therefore is greater so as to better prepare for that next vigorous challenge,” said Seldeen.

These responses include a greater flow of blood to the muscles — which carries oxygen and fuel — as well as increased muscle mass and strength.

Body fat is also reduced as fat is converted to fuel, and insulin signaling improves, which can reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes.

There’s also a boost to your exercise capacity.

“Vigorous exercise — for example, high-intensity training — tends to be superior to lower intensity exercise for increasing maximal MET level,” said Butcher.

It also takes less time to get similar health benefits from vigorous exercise than from moderate-intensity activities.

However, this doesn’t mean vigorous exercise is the only way to go.

“Moderate exercise … delivers some of these enhancements, albeit to a lesser degree,” said Seldeen, “but there are benefits of moderate exercise that are very important, such as reducing stress and chronic inflammation.”

Vigorous exercise safe for all ages

Although high-intensity exercise like spin class and boot camps is often marketed to 20- and 30-somethings, vigorous exercise can be appropriate for any age group.

“Aging exercisers often have the potential for even greater benefits to health than their younger counterparts, mostly because they tend to be more de-conditioned,” said Butcher.

Seldeen and his colleague Dr. Bruce Troen, chief of the division of geriatric and palliative medicine in the Jacobs School at University at Buffalo, carried out research in which older veterans did high-intensity interval training (HIIT) on a recumbent bicycle three times per week.

Both researchers are affiliated with the VA Western New York Healthcare System.

The workout sessions involved alternating minute-long bouts of intense and less intense pedaling. The entire workout, with a 3-minute warmup, was only 10 minutes long.

Seldeen said vigorous exercise — along with strength training — can slow and sometimes reverse the decline in muscle mass that begins after age 30 and becomes more pronounced with age.

This is important for everyone, but especially for women. Women are also at greater risk for osteoporosis. Exercise is a key way of maintaining bone health.

“Women are more likely to be frail as they age — a condition of greater susceptibility to illnesses, falls, and disability,” said Seldeen. “Boosting muscle function and quality with exercise is the best way to stave off frailty.”

Vigorous activity comes in many styles

There are many types of vigorous workouts. These all push your muscles and cardiovascular system to their limits.

One of the most well-known is HIIT, the alternating intense-moderate exercise that the older veterans did in Seldeen’s and Troen’s research study.

Few studies have compared HIIT to just continuous vigorous exercise — like biking up a mountain for half an hour — but Seldeen said they likely offer similar benefits.

He said many people find HIIT attractive for two reasons — the exercise sessions can be short and there’s a built-in low-intensity “recovery” period.

Some HIIT workouts, though, involve a lot of movement — think burpees and jumping jacks. This can be hard on the joints, especially if you are middle-aged or older, or have more weight.

But there are other options for vigorous exercise.

Elise Joan, a Beachbody Super Trainer, developed an online exercise program called Barre Blend that is high-intensity but low-impact.

“It’s actually designed to stabilize your joints, support your spine, and build your core, along with providing that vigorous exercise,” said Joan.

She said a test group of men in their 50s who wanted to lose weight adapted well to this workout.

They were “having fun, getting their heart rates up, getting all the results they wanted, without ever doing anything high-impact,” said Joan.

Seldeen said these shorter, intense workouts may give people “a greater sense of accomplishment, and that may be the motivating factor to keep (exercising) throughout life.”

Exercising harder, but safely

Vigorous exercise can offer greater benefits than less intense workouts, but there are some downsides.

“The risk of injury increases with greater amounts and intensities of activity beyond the guideline-recommended minimum level,” said Michael LaMonte, PhD, a research associate professor of epidemiology and environmental health at the University at Buffalo’s School of Public Health and Health Professions.

But done appropriately, vigorous exercise can be safe.

Seldeen recommends that people check with a doctor before starting a vigorous exercise program. And “listen to your body and stop if something doesn’t feel right.”

Increasing the intensity of your workouts gradually is usually safer. It also helps you stick with it.

“There is nothing to be gained by going ‘all out’ several times a week,” said Butcher. “In general, it is usually considered best to do a combination of exercise intensities; some lower and longer, with some higher and shorter.”

But even if vigorous exercise is not your thing, don’t trade in regular movement for binge watching television.

“The casual exerciser shouldn’t despair,” said Butcher. “There are great benefits to even a little bit of exercise, even if it doesn’t increase your fitness to a high degree.”

LaMonte said older adults who are limited by disease or frailty can benefit even from light-intensity physical activity.

For the general public, many of whom don’t meet the recommended amount of physical activity, LaMonte offers a simpler approach to staying active: “Sit less, move more — every minute counts.”

Courtesy: (healthline)