By Wayne Drash,
CNN
Updated 9:42 AM ET, Sat
October 20, 2018
·
Fitness leads to longer life, researchers found, with no limit
to the benefit of aerobic exercise
·
Comparing those with a sedentary lifestyle to the top exercise
performers, the risk of premature death was 500% higher.
Atlanta, Georgia (CNN)We've all heard exercise
helps you live longer. But a new study goes one step further, finding that a sedentary
lifestyle is worse for your health than smoking, diabetes and heart disease.
Dr.
Wael Jaber, a cardiologist at the Cleveland Clinic and senior author of the
study, called the results "extremely surprising."
"Being
unfit on a treadmill or in an exercise stress test has a worse prognosis, as
far as death, than being hypertensive, being diabetic or being a current
smoker," Jaber told CNN. "We've never seen something as pronounced as
this and as objective as this."
Jaber
said researchers must now convey the risks to the general population that
"being unfit should be considered as strong of a risk factor as
hypertension, diabetes and smoking -- if not stronger than all of them."
"It
should be treated almost as a disease that has a prescription, which is called
exercise," he said.
Researchers
retrospectively studied 122,007 patients who underwent exercise treadmill
testing at Cleveland Clinic between January 1, 1991 and December 31, 2014 to
measure all-cause mortality relating to the benefits of exercise and fitness.
Those with the lowest exercise rate accounted for 12% of the participants.
The
study was published Friday in the journal JAMA Network Open.
"Cardiovascular
disease and diabetes are the most expensive diseases in the United States. We
spend more than $200 billion per year treating these diseases and their
complications. Rather than pay huge sums for disease treatment, we should be
encouraging our patients and communities to be active and exercise daily,"
said Dr. Jordan Metzl, sports medicine physician at the Hospital for Special
Surgery and author of the book "The Exercise Cure."
Jaber
said the other big revelation from the research is that fitness leads to longer
life, with no limit to the benefit of aerobic exercise. Researchers have always
been concerned that "ultra" exercisers might be at a higher risk of
death, but the study found that not to be the case.
"There
is no level of exercise or fitness that exposes you to risk," he said.
"We can see from the study that the ultra-fit still have lower
mortality."
"In
this study, the most fit individuals did the best," said Metzl, who was
not involved in the study. "Once cleared by their physicians, patients
shouldn't be afraid of exercise intensity."
The
benefits of exercise were seen across all ages and in both men and women,
"probably a little more pronounced in females," Jaber said. "Whether
you're in your 40s or your 80s, you will benefit in the same way."
The
risks, he said, became more shocking when comparing those who don't exercise
much. "We all know that a sedentary lifestyle or being unfit has some
risk. But I'm surprised they overwhelm even the risk factors as strong as
smoking, diabetes or even end-stage disease."
"People
who do not perform very well on a treadmill test," Jaber said, "have
almost double the risk of people with kidney failure on dialysis."
What
made the study so unique, beyond the sheer number of people studied, he said
was that researchers weren't relying on patients self-reporting their exercise.
"This is not the patients telling us what they do," Jaber said.
"This is us testing them and figuring out objectively the real measure of
what they do."
Comparing
those with a sedentary lifestyle to the top exercise performers, he said, the
risk associated with death is "500% higher."
"If
you compare the risk of sitting versus the highest performing on the exercise
test, the risk is about three times higher than smoking," Jaber explained.
Comparing
somebody who doesn't exercise much to somebody who exercises regularly, he
said, still showed a risk 390% higher. "There actually is no ceiling for
the benefit of exercise," he said. ""There's no age limit that
doesn't benefit from being physically fit."
Dr.
Satjit Bhusri, a cardiologist at Lenox Hill Hospital, who was not involved in
the study, said this reinforces what we know. "Sedentary, Western lifestyles
have lead to a higher incidence in heart disease and this shows that it's
modifiable. It's reversible," he explained, adding that doctors are really
good at treating patients who have had cardiovascular events but they can be
prevented. "We're meant to walk, run, exercise. It's all about getting up
and moving."
For
patients, especially those who live a sedentary lifestyle, Jaber said,
"You should demand a prescription from your doctor for exercise."
So get
moving.
CNN's Debra Goldschmidt contributed to this report
https://www.cnn.com/2018/10/19/health/study-not-exercising-worse-than-smoking/index.html?_lrsc=6c324840-000a-4ada-aa6d-7862c1f17b87&cid=soc-linkedin-elevate
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