Posted
2/21/2008
Hooker suggests more study involving different populations
NEW ORLEANS - Even a moderate level of aerobic fitness can
significantly reduce the threat of a stroke for men and women, according
to an exercise science researcher at the University of South Carolina's
Arnold School of Public Health.
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Dr.
Steven Hooker |
"Aerobic Fitness has a protective effect regardless of the presence
or absence of other stroke risk factors, including family history of
cardiovascular disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, elevated
cholesterol levels and high body mass index," said Dr. Steven Hooker,
lead author of the report based on a large, long-running study.
In a Thursday presentation at the American Stroke Association's
International Stroke Conference 2008, Hooker noted the study is the
first to suggest that there may be a significant independent association
between cardiorespiratory (aerobic) fitness and fatal and nonfatal
stroke in men and nonfatal stroke in women.
Stroke is particularly serious in South Carolina, one of ten
southeastern states identified as the nation's "Stroke Belt." The May
issue of the American Heart Association journal Stroke, identified the
coastal plains of the Carolinas and Georgia as the "buckle" of the
Stroke Belt.
In this 153-county area stroke deaths are 2.1 times higher than the
rate of the nation overall among people ages 35 to 54 and 1.7 times
greater for people between 55 and 74.
About 780,000 U.S. adults suffer a stroke each year, and stroke is a
leading cause of serious, long-term disability in the United States,
according to the American Stroke Association.
Arnold School researchers analyzed data on more than 60,000 people -
46,405
men and 15,282 women who participated in the Aerobics Center
Longitudinal Study between 1970 and 2001 at the Cooper Aerobics Center
in Dallas.
The participants, ages 18 to 100 and free of known cardiovascular
disease when they entered the study, were followed for an average of 18
years. During that time, 863 people - 692 men and 171 women - had
strokes.
Upon entering the study, each participant took a test to measure
cardiorespiratory fitness in which they walked on a treadmill at
increasing grade and/or speed until they reached their maximal aerobic
capacity.
Although many previous studies have looked at an association between
self-reported physical activities and cardiovascular disease, few have
used direct measurements such as the CRF measure used in this study,
Hooker said. This is also the first study to explore the association
between CRF and risk of stroke in women.
Men in the top quartile (25 percent) of CRF level had a 40 percent
lower relative risk of stroke compared to men in the lowest quartile.
That inverse relationship remained after adjusting for other factors
such as smoking, alcohol intake, family history of cardiovascular
disease, body mass index (an estimation of body fatness), high blood
pressure, diabetes and high cholesterol levels, he said.
Among women, those in the higher CRF level had a 43 percent lower
relative risk than those in the lowest fitness level.
The overall stroke risk dropped substantially at the moderate CRF
level, with the protective effect persisting nearly unchanged through
higher fitness levels. Most persons can achieve a moderate CRF level by
doing 30 minutes or more of brisk walking, or an equivalent aerobic
activity, five days a week.
"We found that a low-to-moderate amount of aerobic fitness for men
and women across the whole adult age spectrum would be enough to
substantially reduce stroke risk," said Hooker, who also is director of
USC's Prevention Research Center.
"Although stroke death rates have declined over the past few decades,
the public health burden of stroke-related disabilities continues to be
large and may even increase in coming years, as the population ages."
Physical activity is a major modifiable cardiovascular disease risk
factor. Increasing the nation's CRF through regular physical activity
could be a vital weapon to lower the incidence of stroke in men and
women, he said.
One of the study's limitations is that most of the participants were
white, well-educated and middle-upper income, he said. He recommended
that data be collected from other populations including African
Americans.
Co-authors of the study include Dr. Xuemei Sui, Dr. Natalie
Colabianchi, Dr. John Vena, Dr. James Laditka, and Dr. Steven N. Blair,
all on the USC faculty. Dr. Michael J. LaMonte of the University of
Buffalo was also a co-author.
The study was supported by National Institutes of Health grants and
the Communities Foundation of Texas.
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