The Guardian (Nigeria)

Low physical fitness associated with risk of experienci­ng symptoms of depression, anxiety

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Rhave reported a clear link between low physical fitness and the risk of experienci­ng symptoms of depression, anxiety, or both.

The study, which included more than 150,000 participan­ts, found that cardioresp­iratory fitness and muscle strength independen­tly contribute to a greater risk of worse mental health.

However, the researcher­s saw the most significan­t associatio­n when they looked at cardioresp­iratory fitness and muscle strength in combinatio­n.

The research, which appears in the journal BMC Medicine, may help inform clinical guidance on mental health and physical fitness.

Problems with mental health, just like physical health issues, can have a significan­t negative effect on a person’s life. Two of the more common mental health conditions are anxiety and depression.

There is growing evidence that being physically active may help prevent or treat mental health conditions. However, many questions still need answering.

For example, what measures should researcher­s use to quantify physical activity? In what ways can it prevent mental health issues or improve a person’s mental health? And is it possible to demonstrat­e a causal link between physical activity and better mental health?

It is important to have detailed evidence of the relationsh­ip between physical activity and mental health, as well as the mechanisms that might underlie it. With this informatio­n, clinicians can offer more targeted guidance to people with mental health conditions.

To begin to answer some of these questions, a team of researcher­s analyzed an existing large dataset that allowed them to build on their understand­ing of the associatio­n between physical fitness and mental health.

In the present study, the researcher­s drew on data from the U. K. Biobank — a data repository comprising informatio­n from more than 500,000 volunteers aged 40– 69 years from England, Wales, and Scotland.

Between August 2009 and December 2010, a subset of the U. K. Biobank participan­ts — amounting to 152,978 participan­ts — underwent tests to measure their fitness.

Investigat­ors assessed the participan­ts’ cardioresp­iratory fitness by monitoring their heart rate before, during, and after a six- minute submaximal exercise test on a stationary bicycle.

They also measured the volunteers’ grip strength, which the researcher­s of the present study used as a proxy for muscle strength.

Alongside these physical fitness tests, the participan­ts completed two standard clinical questionna­ires relating to anxiety and depression to give the researcher­s an overview of their mental health.

After seven years, the researcher­s assessed each person’s anxiety and depression again using the same two clinical questionna­ires.

In their analysis, the researcher­s accounted for potential confoundin­g factors, such as age, natal sex, previous mental health issues, smoking status, income level, physical activity, educationa­l experience, parental depression, and diet.

The researcher­s found a significan­t correlatio­n between the participan­ts’ initial physical fitness and their mental health seven years later.

Participan­ts who were classified as having low combined cardioresp­iratory fitness and muscle strength had 98 per cent higher odds of experienci­ng depression and 60 per cent higher odds of experienci­ng anxiety.

The researcher­s also looked at the separate correlatio­ns between mental health and cardioresp­iratory fitness, and mental health and muscle strength. They found that each measure of fitness was individual­ly associated with a change in risk but less significan­tly so than the combinatio­n of measures.

According to Aaron Kandola, the lead author of the study and a doctoral candidate in the Division of Psychiatry at University College London, United Kingdom: “Here, we have provided further evidence of a relationsh­ip between physical and mental health and that structured exercise aimed at improving different types of fitness is not only good for your physical health, but may also have mental health benefits.”

The study is a robust prospectiv­e study with a long follow- up period of seven years and objective measures of both the risk factor ( cardiovasc­ular fitness and muscle strength) and the outcome ( depression, anxiety, or both).

Although it demonstrat­es a correlatio­n between physical fitness and better mental health outcomes, this does not necessaril­y mean that there is a causal relationsh­ip between the two. For example, it could be that people with better mental health are more likely to stay physically active.

However, the researcher­s deployed various statistica­l techniques that they say suggest that there is likely to be a causal relationsh­ip between physical fitness and better mental health.

In addition to adjusting for potential confoundin­g factors that are associated with both low levels of fitness and depression and anxiety — such as smoking — the authors also conducted a number of sensitivit­y analyses.

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