Free Health Information and More for You and Your Family, Updated Weekly
Exercise Can't Compensate for Sitting
COLUMBIA, Mo.,
Nov. 20 (UPI) -- Even exercising for an hour a day isn't sufficient to
reverse the effects of sitting the rest of the day, U.S. researchers found.
University of
Missouri-Columbia researchers Marc Hamilton and Theodore Zderic found evidence
that sitting had negative effects on fat and cholesterol metabolism and
that physical inactivity throughout the day stimulated disease-promoting
processes.
Hamilton
said that there is a misconception that actively exercising is the only
way to make a healthy difference in an otherwise sedentary lifestyle but
his studies found that standing and other non-exercise activities burn
many calories in most adults even if they don't otherwise exercise.
"The enzymes
in blood vessels of muscles responsible for 'fat burning' are shut off
within hours of not standing," Hamilton said in a statement. "Standing
and moving lightly will re-engage the enzymes, and it stands to reason
that when people sit much of that time they are losing the opportunity
for optimal metabolism throughout the day."
Common non-exercise
physical activities include: household chores, shopping, fidgeting and
standing while watching a ball game, watching TV or talking on the telephone.
The findings
are published in Diabetes and are to be presented at the Second International
Congress on Physical Activity and Public Health in the Netherlands.