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Researchers Identify Pathways Leading To Activation Of Good Fat
Reported Sep. 22, 2011
A new study from the University of New
Hampshire finds that the leg
strength and power of overweight older women is significantly less than that
of normal-weight older
women, increasing their risk for disability and loss of independence. With
more Americans aging and
becoming overweight or obese, the study, published recently in the Journal
of Electromyography and
Kinesiology, dispels the popular image of the bird-thin elder being at
greatest risk of becoming disabled
due to loss of muscle mass.
"That's the chorus that's been sung for the last 20 years," says lead author
Dain LaRoche, assistant
professor of kinesiology at UNH. "But with two-thirds of Americans
overweight or obese and the elderly
population expected to double by year 2030, we are going to see a large
portion of people who are
disabled due to the concurrent gaining of weight and loss of strength."
Working with two undergraduate students, Rachel Kralian and Erica Millet
(both class of 2010), LaRoche
sought to measure the impact of excess weight on subjects' leg strength,
walking speed, and power, the
factors that affect activities of daily living like rising from a chair or
climbing stairs. They found
very little difference in the absolute strength of the overweight and
normal-weight participants, but
when their strength-to-weight ratio was calculated, the overweight women had
an average of 24 percent
lower strength than the normal-weight study participants.
"The deficits were even worse when you looked at power," says LaRoche,
adding that power -- the rate at
which strength is applied -- is more closely related to physical functions
and fall risk than strength.
The overweight women demonstrated 38 percent less power than the normal
weight women. Walking speed was
significantly slower -- about 20 percent -- for the overweight participants,
as well.
"Everything pointed to the fact that it was the extra fat that these people
were carrying that was really
limiting their mobility," he says. "Being of a normal body weight lets you
perform activities of daily
living and live on your own longer."
Based on these findings, LaRoche suggests that normal-weight adults should
work to maintain their weight
and strength as they age. Older adults who are overweight can improve their
strength-to-weight ratio by
either losing weight or gaining strength. Perhaps surprisingly, data suggest
the latter is the easier
route. While most people are not successful at losing weight, "even the
oldest old people can have
dramatic increases in strength," says LaRoche. The key to building strength
is to fatigue the muscle with
eight to fifteen repetitions, an aspect many new to weight training
overlook.
LaRoche has been researching effects of strength and exercise on elderly
populations for several years,
but this is his first foray into the effects of obesity on this population.
"I never intended to study
overweight and obese elders, but it became obvious to me that being
overweight is a growing and problematic concern," he says.
LaRoche was supported by the National Institute on Aging.
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