Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Feeling stressed? Lifting weights might help

Resistance exercise seen lowering anxiety levels

- By Lisa Rapaport

People who do resistance exercises like weightlift­ing might experience less anxiety than people who don’t work out, a research review suggests.

Researcher­s analyzed data from 16 previously published studies with a total of 922 participan­ts who were randomly assigned to do resistance training or be inactive. The study was published in Sports Medicine online Aug. 17.

Resistance workouts were associated with a reduction in anxiety symptoms whether or not participan­ts had a mental health disorder, though the effect was more pronounced in healthy people who didn’t report any physical or psychologi­cal problems.

“The positive effects of exercise training on mental health are well establishe­d; however, the majority of this knowledge is based on studies involving aerobic-based training,” said lead study author Brett Gordon, a physical education and sports researcher at the University of Limerick in Ireland.

“RET (resistance exercise training) significan­tly reduced anxiety in both healthy participan­ts and those with a physical or mental illness, and the effect size of these reductions is comparable to that of frontline treatments such as medication and psychother­apy,” Gordon said by email. “RET is a low-cost behavior with minimal risk, and can be an effective tool to reduce anxiety.”

Because the analysis only focused on resistance training, the results can’t show whether this type of activity might be better or worse than aerobic or other types of exercise for easing anxiety symptoms.

While the effects of resistance exercise on the brain are not as well understood as the impact of aerobic workouts, emerging research has also linked resistance training to less shrinkage of white matter in the brain, said Dianna Purvis Jaffin of the Brain Performanc­e Institute at the University of Texas at Dallas.

White matter is composed of nerve fibers that connect neurons in different parts of the brain. Changes in white matter can occur with age and are thought to be involved in cognitive and behavioral problems.

It’s possible that exercise might help ease anxiety simply by distractin­g people from how they’re feeling and giving them something else to focus on, Jaffin, who wasn’t involved in the current study, said by email.

“Exercise generally requires some level of concentrat­ion on the activity and may serve as a distractio­n, and at least acutely interrupt rumination and obsessive worrying,” Jaffin said.

While the amount of exercise may influence the impact of workouts on mental health, there isn’t enough evidence available yet to prescribe a specific amount of activity, said Steven Petruzzell­o, a body mechanics researcher at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign who wasn’t involved in the study.

“The best advice at the present time is to ‘just do it’ — it being whatever the person finds enjoyable or at least tolerable,” Petruzzell­o said. “For some that might mean going for a walk, for others it might entail more vigorous forms of activity.”

 ?? Thinkstock ?? A study found resistance workouts like lifting weights were associated with a reduction in anxiety symptoms, whether or not the participan­ts had a mental health disorder.
Thinkstock A study found resistance workouts like lifting weights were associated with a reduction in anxiety symptoms, whether or not the participan­ts had a mental health disorder.

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