3 MIN. READ

Should Losing Weight or Exercising Be Your Goal?

iStock/SeventyFour

We all want to be fit and trim. Usually in that order. How many of us remember Twiggy from the 60’s or Kate Moss from the 90’s? Super models who exemplified the meaning of being thin, but realistically, who few women wanted to emulate. No, being trim without being fit is not an attractive goal. So what about being fit without being trim? That’s for more achievable, right? “Yeah, but unless I lose the weight my risk of cardiovascular disease will still be high. Won’t it?”

The Research

Not so fast Sherlock. A recent study in the British Journal of Sports Medicine discovered a very interesting observation. People who are aerobically fit, i.e. those who perform some sort of cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF), have a significantly reduced risk of premature death due to cardiovascular disease even if they are obese.

Yep, you read it correctly. Obese people who exercised were just as likely as non-obese people who exercised of dying due to cardiovascular disease. Or, another way to look at it is, thin people, or even people with normal BMI’s who do not exercise, are almost 2-3x more likely of dying due to cardiovascular disease then obese people who do exercise.

“This tells us that it’s much more important, all things considered, to focus on the fitness aspect” of health and longevity, “rather than the fatness aspect,” Siddhartha Angadi, senior author of the study and an exercise physiologist at the University of Virginia, told The Washington Post.

The review pooled data from 20 prior studies involving nearly 400,000 midlife and older adults from multiple countries, about 30% of whom were women.

Participants were grouped based on their aerobic fitness, which was objectively measured through cardiovascular stress tests, and their body mass index (BMI).

The findings were clear:

  • People who were fit and overweight or obese had similar risks of death as fit people at a normal weight
  • But people who were unfit — no matter their weight — had 2 to 3 times higher risks of dying early from any cause or heart disease

 

“From a statistical standpoint, fitness largely eliminated the risk” of early death from obesity-related conditions, Angadi said.

And it doesn’t require that much an effort to be considered fit. Even moving slightly higher than the bottom 20% of fitness for someone’s age can offer substantial health benefits. Even going for brisk walks where you can talk but not sing, is enough to boost your fitness accordingly.

Takeaway

So maybe don’t skip that trip to Gino’s Pizzeria (at least on the weekend), but definitely hit the treadmill, stair master, or rowing machine come Monday morning 😊.

 

Source:

Cardiorespiratory fitness, body mass index and mortality: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Fitness Matters More Than Weight for Longevity, Study Says

Share the Post:

Active Aging News

Weekly Newsletter

RELATED NEWS

Sleepy woman stirring coffee in the morning

Ozempic for Sleep?

Older overweight African American woman with tennis racket

Obese and Aging? Are You Doing Weight Loss Right?

Close up aged Caucasian man old sportsman morning training warm-up sporty lifestyle exercise retired senior stadium city outside masculinity power movement routine aerobics gymnastic bodycare wellness

Why “When” You Exercise Matters More Than “How Much”

Blood test sample for Tumor markers test for diagnosis cancer

Your Blood Could Tell a Story: The New Test That Screens for 50 Cancers

3d illustration of HIV virus. Medical concept

Could An Existing HIV Medication Hold the Key to Preventing Alzheimer’s?

OTHER STORIES

Women injecting semaglutide

Navigating the GLP-1 Wave: What Adults Over 50 Need to Know About the Side Effects

Fumiko Takatsu Performing Face Yoga

Give Your Face a Workout: The Secrets of Face Yoga

Xray profile view of the hypothalamus 3D rendering illustration. Human brain and body anatomy, medical, biology, science, neuroscience, neurology concepts.

The Secret Manager of Your Stamina: Why Your Brain, Not Your Legs, Holds the Keys to Fitness

Park Reverie: A Gentleman's Stroll with a Crutch

The Silent Epidemic of Osteoporosis in Men Over 50

Citizen,In,Grey,Sport,Trousers,Holding,The,Kettlebell,Between,Her

Sumo Squat vs Goblet Squat: Which is Best for Older Adults?

Master gardener teaching student girl in greenhouse flower nursery cultivating the soil

Cut Your Dementia Risk in Half Without Joining a Gym

[chatbot style="floating"]

Please enter your email to access your profile