It
wasn't too long ago that people with conditions such as high
blood pressure, high blood sugar, arthritis, asthma and heart
disease, were told by Physicians to "take it easy","stay
in bed" or ingest several medications in order to stabilize
these conditions. Today, there is little doubt how the impact
of lifestyle changes, including exercise, can dramatically
prevent, treat and even cure many of these ailments.
Any sustained movement,
like walking, bicycling, swimming, or cross-country skiing,
will reduce the risk of several life-threatening diseases,
such as coronary heart disease, hypertension, diabetes, high
cholesterol, and possibly cancer. Exercise does not need to
be boring, expensive, time-consuming, or inconvenient. Moderate
forms of exercise will give the benefits needed to prevent
disease. Gardening, dancing, walking, household chores, and
even shopping expeditions can give you enough exercise to
meet the daily requirement. All that's needed to personalize
your fitness plan is a creative and adventurous spirit.
Exercise v.s. diet is often the debate that many health professionals
evaluate. By examining each disease through clinical trials,
we can better determine the efficacy of both exercise and
diet in the treatment of many common ailments. Diet, for example,
is the cornerstone of diabetes care, but if diet is combined
with exercise, diabetics dramatically improve their condition
by more than 45% than with diet alone.
"The problem with our health
today, is that people are just not moving enough. You're talking
about a dramatic decrease in our level of physical activity
from just 30 to 50 years ago. That's a relatively insignificant
amount of time for our bodies to adapt in comparison to the
activity levels we had evolved to before the technological
era. This combined with irresponsible eating habits is creating
the health crisis you see before you today." - PreventDisease.com
For people with chronic ailments, exercise used to be viewed
as asking for trouble. However, current evidence suggests
that in both health and disease, the overall prognosis is
better for the exerciser than for the sedentary. For example,
a recent study showed that intensive workouts can not only
slow the progress of coronary disease, but actually restore
lost coronary function when the disease is still stable.
"We've yet to find a disease
state where exercise isn't helpful." -Miriam Nelson,
Ph.D, Tufts University.
Clinical trials indicate that exercise can help reduce the
pain and joint damage caused by arthritis, decrease attacks
and the need for medication in asthma sufferers, and ease
anxiety and depression. Other research 11indicates that regular
workouts may cut the risk of symptomatic gallstones by one-third.
Exercise has also recently be found to reduce the side effects
of chemotherapy and improve adherence to such treatment.
For chronically ill individuals, the psychological as well
as physical benefits of exercise can be profound. Even ten
minutes of light exercise a day, can help most chronically
ill patients feel more vibrant, energetic and alert.
"Exercise is empowering and
energizing, and it increases your sense of control over the
situation. You're never too sick or too old to get started
exercising." -Bess Marcus, Ph.D, Brown's University
One of the most effective killers in North America is cardiovascular
disease. It is also a disease which is so easily preventable
through proper exercise and diet. Out of a recent study conducted
by Consumers Reports, almost 60% of people who had heart conditions,
reported that exercise and diet (types of exercise and diet
were not specified) helped them feel much better. Hypertension,
a common precursor to cardiovascular disease is also directly
influenced, treated and prevented by supervised exercise and
diet.
Studies still show that most doctors still fail to advise
patients about lifestyle changes to prevent and treat disease.
Economic pressure for briefer doctor visits, lack of formal
training in nutrition, exercise and lifestyle medicine, seem
to underlie doctors' poor performance in this area.
People with chronic medical problems should insist their health-care
providers give them information on how execise and lifestyle
changes can affect the course of a disease. If patients cannot
obtain this information from their doctors, they should find
an appropriate health professional who can.
The Chart below indicates the maximum improvement for both
diet and exercise for 6 common disorders, based on well designed
clinical trials. These lifestyle changes can also lead to
weight loss, which eases many of these disorders, thus increasing
the maximum improvement.
|
CONDITION
|
TYPE OF EXERCISE
|
MAXIMUM IMPROVEMENT WITH EXERCISE
|
TYPE OF DIET
|
MAXIMUM IMPROVEMENT WITH DIET
|
|
High Blood Pressure
|
Aerobic
|
 15%
|
Low fat, high produce, high dairy
(low fat)
|
 11%
|
|
High LDL cholesterol
|
--
|
--
|
Low saturated fat
|
 20%
|
|
Low HDL cholesterol
|
Aerobic
|
 15%
|
--
|
--
|
|
High Blood Sugar
|
Aerobic
|
 15%
|
High whole grain, high produce,
limited calorie
|
 30%
|
|
Arthritis Pain
|
Strength training, flexibility,
low-impact aerobic
|
 40%
|
--
|
--
|
|
Low Bone Density
|
Weight bearing
|
 3%
|
High calcium (including supplements)
|
 2%
|
Net
Reference 39,37,86
|