When it comes to walking, it’s all good
Newswise — These days, it’s
easy for people to get confused about exercise
-- how many minutes a day should they spend
working out, for how long and at what exertion
level? Conflicting facts and opinions abound,
but one Mayo Clinic physician says the bottom
line is this: walking is good, whether the
outcome measurement is blood pressure, diabetes,
cardiovascular disease, joint problems or mental
health.
“Getting out there and
taking a walk is what it’s all about,” says
James Levine, M.D., Ph.D., and a Mayo Clinic
expert on obesity. “You don’t have to join a
gym, you don’t have to check your pulse. You
just have to switch off the TV, get off the sofa
and go for a walk.”
The health benefit
associated with walking is the subject of Dr.
Levine’s editorial in the July issue of Mayo
Clinic Proceedings. Dr. Levine’s piece is
entitled, “Exercise: A Walk in the Park?” and
accompanies a Proceedings article that showcases
the merits of walking as beneficial exercise.
The study, undertaken by
physicians from the Shinshu University Graduate
School of Medicine in Matsumoto, Japan,
determined that high-intensity interval walking
may protect against high blood pressure and
decreased muscle strength among older people.
Over five months, the
Japanese researchers studied 246 adults who
engaged in either no walking or moderate to
high-intensity walking. The group who engaged in
high-intensity walking experienced the most
significant improvement in their health, the
researchers found.
In his editorial, Dr.
Levine says the study lends credence to the
notion that walking is a legitimate, worthy mode
of exercise for all people. Dr. Levine says it’s
a welcome message for his patients, who fight
obesity and appreciate that a walk is one way to
improve their health.
Unlike a health club
membership or personal trainer, walking “is
there for everyone,” Dr. Levine says.
“Walking doesn’t cost you anything, you can
do it barefoot and you can do it now, this
minute.”
“Sitting is bad for
cholesterol, it’s bad for your back and
muscles,” Dr. Levine says. “It’s such a terrible
thing for our bodies to do and the less of it
you do, the better. But activity is not easy. If
it were easy, everyone would do it.”
Authors for the study in
Mayo Clinic Proceedings on high-intensity
walking were Ken-Ichi Nemoto; Hirokazu Gen-No,
Ph.D.; Shizue Masuki, Ph.D.; Kazunobu Okazaki,
Ph.D.; and Hiroshi Nose, M.D., Ph.D., all from
the Shinshu University Graduate School of
Medicine.
A peer-review journal, Mayo
Clinic Proceedings publishes original articles,
reviews and editorials dealing with clinical and
laboratory medicine, clinical research, basic
science research and clinical epidemiology. Mayo
Clinic Proceedings is published monthly by Mayo
Foundation for Medical Education and Research as
part of its commitment to the medical education
of physicians. The journal has been published
for more than 80 years and has a circulation of
130,000 nationally and internationally. Articles
are available online at
http://www.mayoclinicproceedings.com.