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Diet-Exercise Combo Best for Obese Seniors
April 7, 2011— For obese seniors, dieting
and exercise together are more effective at
improving physical performance and reducing
frailty than either alone.
The research, by a team at Washington
University School of Medicine in St. Louis,
is reported March 31 in The
New England Journal of Medicine.
Older adults who are obese face severe
health risks, including high blood pressure,
heart disease and diabetes, which can be
compounded by a lack of mobility.
“We wanted to tease apart the effects of
dieting and exercise in older people who are
obese,” says principal investigator Dennis
T. Villareal, MD, adjunct associate
professor of medicine at Washington
University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
“In older adults, obesity exacerbates
declines in physical performance and leads
to frailty, impaired quality of life and
increases in nursing home admissions. Given
the increasing prevalence of obesity even
among older people, it is important to find
ways to combat the problem and help seniors
remain healthier and more independent.”
In this study, Villareal and his colleagues
evaluated the effects of dieting and
exercise in more than 100 obese seniors over
a one-year period. Although weight loss
alone and exercise alone improved physical
function by about 12 percent and 15 percent,
respectively, neither was as effective as
diet and exercise together, which improved
physical performance by 21 percent.
The investigators used the Physical
Performance Test, a test that evaluates an
individual’s ability to perform tasks, such
as walking 50 feet, putting on and removing
a coat, standing up from a chair, picking up
a penny, climbing a flight of stairs and
lifting a book.
In addition, the researchers evaluated peak
oxygen consumption during exertion with
treadmill walking. On that test, obese
elderly people who both dieted and exercised
improved 17 percent from their baseline. The
diet-only group showed a 10 percent gain,
and the exercise-only group improved about 8
percent.
All subjects in the study were over 65, with
some as old as 85 when the study began.
Their average age was about 70. Volunteers
were randomly assigned to one of four
groups.
One set of seniors was placed on a
low-calorie diet to help them lose weight.
Members of a second group attended exercise
sessions three times a week, doing balance
work, resistance training and aerobic
exercise. A third group combined both the
low-calorie diet and the exercise. The last
group made no changes in diet or exercise
habits.
All subjects had medically significant
obesity, defined as having a body mass index
(BMI) of 30 or more. BMI measures the
relationship between a person’s height and
weight.
At the study’s outset, participants had
evidence of frailty and impaired physical
function based on their Physical Performance
Test and on measures of their peak aerobic
capacity using an exercise stress test and a
questionnaire about their physical function.
Villareal and his team also surveyed study
subjects about their quality of life, and
again, those in the combined diet-exercise
group had the biggest improvements.
Their
scores improved by 15 percent, compared to
14 percent in the diet-only group and 10
percent in the exercise-only group. By every
measure, strength, balance and gait all
showed the most consistent improvement in
the diet-exercise group.
“In older, obese people, it may be more
important to improve physical function and
quality of life, rather than to reverse or
treat risk factors for cardiovascular
disease,” says Villareal, now chief of
geriatrics at the New Mexico Veterans
Affairs Health Care System and professor of
medicine at the University of New Mexico
School of Medicine, both in Albuquerque.
“Combining exercise and weight loss isn’t
designed so much to extend their life
expectancy as it is to improve their quality
of life during their remaining years and to
help seniors avoid being admitted to a
nursing home.”
There is some debate, however, about whether
it’s good for elderly people to lose weight,
even if they are obese. Some studies have
found an association between weight loss in
seniors and mortality risk, but Villareal
says many of those studies did not
distinguish between voluntary weight loss
and involuntary weight loss that may be
related to illness.
But even if voluntary weight loss carries no
significant risk of shortening life, another
potential drawback is that when older people
lose fat, they also tend to lose muscle and
bone.
In this study, the researchers did find
slight reductions in lean body mass and bone
mineral density among those who lost weight,
but the decreases were smaller in the
combined diet-exercise group than in those
who dieted or exercised alone. The
diet-exercise group participants lost 3
percent of their lean body mass, with a 1
percent bone mineral loss in the key area of
the hip. Those who only dieted lost 5
percent of their lean body mass and 3
percent in bone mineral density at the hip.
Just as in younger people, the prevalence of
obesity has increased in the elderly. About
20 percent of people 65 and older are obese,
and that is expected to continue rising as
more baby boomers become senior citizens.
Elevated weight is known to be associated
with impairments in daily living,
limitations in mobility and an increased
risk for physical decline and frailty.
“Although losing weight is beneficial and
exercise also is good, when seniors do both,
they get a greater improvement,” he says.
Villareal DT, Chode S. Parimi N, Sinacore
DR, Hilton T, Armamento-Villareal R, Napoli
N, Qualls C, Shah K. Weight loss, exercise
or both and physical function in obese older
adults, The
New England Journal of Medicine, vol.
364(13), pp. 1218-1229. March 31, 2011.
This work was supported by grants from the
National Institute on Aging, the National
Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and
Kidney Diseases and the Eunice Kennedy
Shriver National Institute of Child Health
and Human Development of the National
Institutes of Health and by the Foundation
for Physical Therapy.
Washington University School of Medicine’s
2,100 employed and volunteer faculty
physicians also are the medical staff of
Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children’s
hospitals. The School of Medicine is one of
the leading medical research, teaching and
patient care institutions in the nation,
currently ranked fourth in the nation by
U.S. News & World Report. Through its
affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St.
Louis Children’s hospitals, the School of
Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.
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