Children need at least 90 minutes of exercise a day to avoid heart disease when they are older, according to a new study reported in Lancet (July 23, 2006). The old guidelines recommending 30 minutes of exercise three times a week, or even an hour a day do not appear to be adequate for preventing obesity and heart disease. Researchers used heart rate monitors to measure the activity of 1700 nine- to-fifteen-year-olds in Denmark, Estonia, and Portugal. They then calculated a heart-attack risk score consisting of blood pressure, cholesterol, insulin resistance, and skinfold thickness.
They compared physical activity from the heart rate monitors with the heart attack risk-factor score and found that the more active the child, the lower the heart attack risk score. Many children who exercised for 60 minutes a day were still overweight and had high heart attack risk scores. The authors suggest that the lack of regular physical activity is likely to mean that the children are spending too much time watching TV, playing video and computer games, and eating junk food. There is no reason to expect that the results would be different with American children. The current recommendation of at least an hour per day of moderate activity in children may not be sufficient for future heart health.
Archive
-
▼
2006
(51)
-
▼
October
(19)
- Cross-training for fitness
- Pedal faster to ride better
- Diabetes risk screening tests
- Should you restrict all fats?
- How to do sit-ups
- Children's exercise
- Sports Drinks or Water?
- Second wind
- Marathon training
- Exercise prolongs life
- Weight lifting helps to prevent diabetes
- Dizziness on changing position
- Rosacea: red in the face
- Caffeine
- How to Warm Up
- Bonking: low blood sugar
- Belly fat: why it's dangerous
- Interval training
- Warm up your heart
-
▼
October
(19)
Popular Posts
-
To use rope-jumping for fitness, you need to be skilled enough to jump continuously for twenty to thirty minutes, and jumping that long and ...
-
Of no other fat-loss activity -- eating less, walking on a treadmill, doing sit-ups -- can it be said that participants eagerly count the mi...
-
Some of the weight loss articles out there these days are getting a little nutty. New scientific studies that shed light on how metabolism w...
-
Aging does not cause you to lose muscles. Loss of muscle is caused by lack of exercise. You can preserve both muscle size and strength by co...
-
Athletes tend to push themselves 120 percent while exercising because their main objective is to jump higher, run faster or become stronger....
0 comments:
Post a Comment