Credit: www.active.com |
Walking
briskly can lower your risk of high blood pressure, high cholesterol and
diabetes as much as running can.
Researchers
analyzed 33,060 runners in the National Runners' Health Study and 15,045
walkers in the National Walkers' Health Study. They found that the same energy
used for moderate intensity walking and vigorous intensity running resulted in
similar reductions in risk for high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes,
and possibly coronary heart disease over the study's six years.
"Walking
and running provide an ideal test of the health benefits of moderate-intensity
walking and vigorous-intensity running because they involve the same muscle
groups and the same activities performed at different intensities," said
Paul T. Williams, Ph.D., the study's principal author and staff scientist at
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Life Science Division in Berkeley,
Calif.
Unlike
previous studies, the researchers assessed walking and running expenditure by
distance, not by time. Participants provided activity data by responding to
questionnaires.
"The
more the runners ran and the walkers walked, the better off they were in health
benefits. If the amount of energy expended was the same between the two groups,
then the health benefits were comparable," Williams said.
Comparing
energy expenditure to self-reported, physician-diagnosed incident hypertension,
hypercholesterolemia, diabetes and coronary heart disease, researchers found:
- Running significantly reduced risk for first-time hypertension 4.2 percent and walking reduced risk 7.2 percent.
- Running reduced first-time high cholesterol 4.3 percent and walking 7 percent.
- Running reduced first-time diabetes 12.1 percent compared to 12.3 percent for walking.
- Running reduced coronary heart disease 4.5 percent compared to 9.3 percent for walking.
"Walking
may be a more sustainable activity for some people when compared to running,
however, those who choose running end up exercising twice as much as those that
choose walking. This is probably because they can do twice as much in an
hour," Williams said.
Study
participants were 18 to 80 years old, clustered in their 40s and 50s. Men
represented 21 percent of the walkers and 51.4 percent of the runners.
"People
are always looking for an excuse not to exercise, but now they have a
straightforward choice to run or to walk and invest in their future
health," Williams said.
###
The above story is based on the April 4, 2013 newsrelease by American Heart Association.
These
findings are reported in the American Heart Association journal
Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology:
Williams
PT, Thompson PD. Walking Versus Running
for Hypertension, Cholesterol, and Diabetes Mellitus Risk Reduction. Arterioscl Thromb Vas, April 4 2013 DOI:
10.1161/ATVBAHA.112.300878
See
also our earlier report on
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