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6 MONTHS FOLLOW-UP ON EXERCISE ADDED TO A SHORT-TERM DIET IN OVERWEIGHT POSTMENOPAUSAL WOMEN - EFFECTS ON BODY-COMPOSITION, RESTING METABOLIC-RATE, CARDIOVASCULAR RISK-FACTORS AND BONE
被引:0
|作者:
SVENDSEN, OL
HASSAGER, C
CHRISTIANSEN, C
机构:
关键词:
FOLLOW-UP;
MENOPAUSE;
EXERCISE;
DIET;
BODY COMPOSITION;
METABOLIC RATE;
LIPOPROTEINS;
BLOOD PRESSURE;
FAT DISTRIBUTION;
BONE MINERAL DENSITY;
D O I:
暂无
中图分类号:
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号:
1002 ;
100201 ;
摘要:
The aim of this work was to study the long-term effects of the addition of exercise to a short-term diet in overweight postmenopausal women. A follow up study was made of 118 overweight, postmenopausal women, who 6 months earlier had completed 12 weeks of randomized intervention (three groups: 4.2 MJ/d diet, 4.2 MJ/d diet with exercise, and controls). The following were measured: body composition and fat distribution (measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry), resting metabolic rate, serum lipids and lipoproteins, blood pressure, and bone mineral densities. It was found that weight was still significantly reduced (by about 8 kg). HDL-C was significantly increased (10%), and triglycerides decreased (20%), whereas the initial reductions in total cholesterol and LDL-C had disappeared at the follow-up. The women from the former diet-plus-exercise group, who were current exercisers at the follow-up, had a significantly greater reduction in weight (10.9 vs 6.6 kg), fat tissue mass (10.0 vs 5.4 kg) and abdominal-to-total-body fat tissue mass (9.6 vs 4.7), and a significantly greater increase in the resting metabolic rate (11.1 vs 1.1 kJ/kg/d), as compared with the non-exercisers from this group. There were no major detrimental changes in total body, spinal, or forearm bone mineral density or in markers of bone turnover. The short-term dietary treatment in this study may have beneficial long-term effects on weight, fat tissue mass and cardiovascular risk factors with no additional benefits from added exercise, unless the exercise is continued.
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页码:692 / 698
页数:7
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