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Exercise Training Amount and Intensity Effects on Metabolic Syndrome (from Studies of a Targeted Risk Reduction Intervention through Defined Exercise)

The American Journal of Cardiology, ISSN: 0002-9149, Vol: 100, Issue: 12, Page: 1759-1766
2007
  • 281
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 222
    Captures
  • 5
    Mentions
  • 5
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    281
    • Citation Indexes
      272
    • Policy Citations
      6
      • Policy Citation
        6
    • Patent Family Citations
      2
      • Patent Families
        2
    • Clinical Citations
      1
      • PubMed Guidelines
        1
  • Captures
    222
  • Mentions
    5
    • News Mentions
      5
      • News
        5
  • Social Media
    5
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      5
      • Facebook
        5

Most Recent News

Effects of a Real-Life Park-Based Physical Activity Interventional Program on Cardiovascular Risk and Physical Fitness

Bruno Temoteo Modesto, MsC 1 ; Teresa Bartholomeu 1 ; Luciano Basso, PhD 2 ; Luiz Augusto Riani Costa, MD 1 ; Tais Tinucci, PhD

Article Description

Although exercise improves individual risk factors for metabolic syndrome (MS), there is little research on the effect of exercise on MS as a whole. The objective of this study was to determine how much exercise is recommended to decrease the prevalence of MS. Of 334 subjects randomly assigned, 227 finished and 171 (80 women, 91 men) had complete data for all 5 Adult Treatment Panel III–defined MS risk factors and were included in this analysis. Subjects were randomly assigned to a 6-month control or 1 of 3 eight-month exercise training groups of (1) low amount/moderate intensity (equivalent to walking ∼19 km/week), (2) low amount/vigorous intensity (equivalent to jogging ∼19 km/week), or (3) high amount/vigorous intensity (equivalent to jogging ∼32 km/week). The low-amount/moderate-intensity exercise prescription improved MS relative to inactive controls (p <0.05). However, the same amount of exercise at vigorous intensity was not significantly better than inactive controls, suggesting that lower-intensity exercise may be more effective in improving MS. The high-amount/vigorous-intensity group improved MS relative to controls (p <0.0001), the low-amount/vigorous-intensity group (p = 0.001), and the moderate-intensity group (p = 0.07), suggesting an exercise-dose effect. In conclusion, a modest amount of moderate-intensity exercise in the absence of dietary changes significantly improved MS and thus supported the recommendation that adults get 30 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise every day. A higher amount of vigorous exercise had greater and more widespread benefits. Finally, there was an indication that moderate-intensity may be better than vigorous-intensity exercise for improving MS.

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