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Archive for September, 2007

Untreated Temporary Diabetes in Pregnancy Linked to Obesity for Children

Tuesday, September 25th, 2007

Source: Foot.com
Publication date: 2007-08-28

Aug. 28–The babies of women who get diabetes while pregnant are almost twice as likely to become overweight or obese as young children, according to a study involving about 600 Clark County women. The study, conducted at Kaiser Permanente health research centers in Portland and Hawaii, links high blood sugar during pregnancy to increased obesity rates in children from 5 to 7 years old.The children of mothers who had very high blood sugar were 89 percent more likely to be overweight and 82 percent more likely to be obese than children of mothers who had normal blood sugar levels during pregnancy.

The study also shows that women treated for pregnancy-related diabetes do not pass an increased risk of obesity on to their children.

“The good news here is that when women were treated for gestational diabetes, their children’s risk for overweight and obesity dropped considerably,” said Dr. Teresa Hillier, a senior investigator at the Center for Health Research Northwest in Portland.

Hillier is lead author of the study, which was published in the September issue of Diabetes Care.

Investigators reviewed the health records of 9,439 women who gave birth between 1995 and 2000. The study included about 600 Clark County women who are members of Kaiser Permanente’s health plan and their children.

Researchers checked the weights of the children between the ages of 5 and 7, a period that is a good predictor of adult obesity.

The relationship between maternal blood sugar and childhood obesity was then evaluated.

Women who had diabetes before pregnancy were not included in the study. Gestational diabetes is a transient condition, Hillier said, appearing during pregnancy and usually going away after birth. It affected about 5 percent of the women in the study.

Hillier recommends screening for gestational diabetes between the 24th and 28th weeks of pregnancy: “It’s not until the second trimester that it appears,” she said.

Treatment starts with diet and exercise, she said. If that isn’t enough, insulin is used.

Researchers attributed the babies’ increased risk of obesity to “metabolic imprinting.”

“The idea is that the baby in the womb is adapting to its environment,” Hillier said. “If the mother’s blood sugar is elevated, the baby adapts to that.”

“Those babies at risk for future obesity problems can have normal birth weights,” Hillier noted, which “was surprising to me.”

The study was funded by the American Diabetes Association.

Did you know?

Babies gain weight rapidly, and then the percentage of body fat normally declines to a minimum level at 5 to 6 years of age; the ‘adiposity rebound’ is the point of maximum leanness, when the body mass index begins to increase again.

Tom Vogt can be reached at 360-759-8008 or at tom.vogt@columbian.com.

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To see more of The Columbian, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.columbian.com.

Copyright (c) 2007, The Columbian, Vancouver, Wash.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Moderate Exercise Works: It’s True! You May Get Even More Benefits If You Don’t Work Out Like a Fiend

Tuesday, September 11th, 2007

Source: Foot.com
Publication date: 2007-08-16

Aug. 16–Bike shop owner Kevin Coggins wasn’t surprised by a study released last week by the Duke University Medical Center, which showed that not only is moderate exercise good, in some instances it may be even better than more vigorous workouts. His cash register has been telling him as much for the past two years. In the ’90s, everyone wanted a mountain bike to go powering through forests on narrow trails, bunny-hopping downed logs and grinding through gardens of rock. During Lance Armstrong’s reign over the Tour de France, from 1999 to 2005, everyone wanted to capture the road bike experience, pedaling for miles and miles.What’s selling today?

Hybrids, that mix of road and mountain bike made for a more recreational, ’round-the-neighborhood-and-down-the-greenway-with-the-kids experience.

“Moderate exercise is as good as strenuous exercise,” says Coggins, who once raced bikes and has owned The Spin Cycle in Cary since the mid-1990s. “I totally agree with that.”

So does a portion of a study released last week by researchers at Duke, who found that low-intensity exercise “dramatically lowered” triglyceride levels. Triglycerides are those pesky particles that lug fat around the body. Reducing their numbers can reduce the risk of both heart disease and diabetes.

The Duke study joins a growing body of evidence suggesting that you don’t have to ride 2,200 miles around France to enjoy good health. Regular rides through the neighborhood will do just fine.

Lasting benefits

The Duke study involved 240 middle-age, sedentary types who were divided into four groups and studied over eight months. Three groups exercised, doing time on the treadmill, elliptical trainer and stationary bike. One group exercised a lot and did so with great intensity, one group also exercised with great intensity but not as much, and the third group exercised in moderation. A fourth group, the control group, retained its sedentary ways.

To the researchers’ surprise, it was the modest exercisers who showed the most change in terms of triglyceride levels.

The study — part of an ongoing fitness and activity study at Duke called Studies of a Targeted Risk Reduction Intervention Through Defined Exercise — also found that the positive effects of exercise lasted longer for the modest exercisers than for the more intense exercisers.

Improved levels of high-density lipoprotein particles, or HDLs, persisted more than two weeks after the moderate exercisers quit exercising modestly. That’s good because HDLs escort cholesterol through the bloodstream to the liver, where it can be eliminated from the body.

“More is generally better than less when it comes to exercise,” cautions Cris Slentz, an exercise physiologist at Duke and lead author of the study. But, he adds, these findings are certainly an endorsement for moderate levels of exercise.

They join a host of studies with a similar message. Among them:

–A six-month study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association showed that women who work out as little as 72 minutes a week improved their fitness level by 4 percent.

–A 2006 study by the U.S. National Institute on Aging found that of 302 older people studied, death rates went down as activity levels — including activities as tame as vacuuming and running errands — rose.

–The 2001 Iowa Women’s Health Study of 40,417 women between ages 55 and 69 found that women who engaged in moderate exercise — including bowling, golf, gardening and long walks — reduced their chances of dying by 37 percent. There was no such reduction observed for women who jogged, played tennis, swam or did aerobics.

“Younger Next Year: A Guide to Living Like 50 Until You’re 80 and Beyond,” by retired lawyer Chris Crowley and Dr. Henry S. Lodge, has a theory about why this is, says bike store owner Coggins, a disciple of the book that came out in 2004.

“What’s the human body been doing the last 3,000 years?” asks Coggins. “It wasn’t doing hard-core endurance athletics. It’s been walking with short bursts of speed, quick bursts to capture prey, then walk back home.

“That’s what’s in the DNA of the human body — all-day low-intensity exercise.”

Parents can find time

One group that may be especially glad to hear that exercising in moderation is good: parents. More specifically, parents who were quite active before they had kids.

Another recent study, this one released in May by the University of Pittsburgh, found that having kids sidelines a lot of active couples.

Women who worked out four hours a week suddenly found themselves down to 90 minutes after having a baby. Fathers in the study typically went from just under eight hours of exercise a week to 4 1/2.

No need for that, say Mike and Alisa Wright Colopy, veterans of the active-couple-turned-parents scene.

In the early 1980s, the Colopys were the epitome of the active couple. Mike did swimathons and cycled, Alisa was getting into triathlons.

Even when Alisa became pregnant with their first son, Travis, that didn’t slow her: On the day he was born in 1986, she managed to run six miles and swim one before heading to the hospital.

As soon as Travis was home from the hospital and could keep his head up, he was out on training runs with mom and dad in one of the first generation baby joggers. When brother Glen came along two years later, they bought a two-seater.

“We’d go out three or four times a week, maybe three to six miles,” says Mike.

The true transition to more moderate exercise came when the boys were ready to strike out on their own.

“When the lads were 4 and 5 years old and I was pushing more than half of my body weight, we had to become more creative in our exercise plan,” says Alisa, who runs Fit and Able Productions, a Cary-based nonprofit that that aims to get families active.

That meant some tag-team exercise: one parent playing with the kids in the main pool while the other swam laps, then swapping, for instance. But it also meant finding exercise wherever they could.

“We went to the zoo all the time,” says Mike. “A zoo is acres and acres of land; you’re constantly walking. You’re not cognizant of it because you’re always looking at stuff.”

Parks and museums were other places where the Colopys would work in some exercise.

And when the kids got into organized sports, Mike and Alisa didn’t sit on the sidelines gabbing with other parents.

They brought their running shoes and shorts and worked in a run.

Thus, the Colopys were able to weather parenthood on a more moderate exercise schedule, one that could be adopted and adapted by the child-free and, as the Duke study is the latest to show, used to optimal benefit.

What you don’t want, says Duke’s Slentz, is to become like the study’s control group, which did nothing other than gain two pounds, on average, and grow a half inch around the waist.

“That may not sound like much,” says Slentz, “but over a decade at that rate that would mean an additional 40 pounds and 10 inches.”

Forty pounds and 10 inches that even a moderate exercise regimen could keep away.

Staff writer Joe Miller can be reached at 812-8450 or joe.miller@newsobserver.com.

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To see more of The News & Observer, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.newsobserver.com.

Copyright (c) 2007, The News & Observer, Raleigh, N.C.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.