The Commercial Appeal

Readers offer feedback about recent columns

- Ask the Doctors Elizabeth Ko and Eve Glazier

Hello again, dear readers, and welcome to late summer! Please indulge us as we remind you (yes, again) to wear sunscreen, use bug sprays, watch for ticks and stay hydrated. We hope the recent columns about the dangers of excessive heat and the warning signs and physical effects of dehydratio­n were of use to you.

❚ Speaking of summer, here’s an interestin­g tip from a reader about keeping kids safe in the water. “When swimming and diving, children should be reminded that they have grown taller and weigh more than they did a year ago,” she wrote. These physical changes can mean that the spot where they safely dove or jumped into a pool or pond last summer may no longer be deep enough for them this year, she said.

❚ Regarding the idea that some senior citizens feel safer taking their daily walks in an enclosed shopping mall, a reader had a different view. “People are more likely to maintain an exercise program if they do their walking in neighborho­ods and parks, where the environmen­t is pleasant, and the scenery is nice,” he wrote. “A shopping mall is anything but pleasant and nice. By walking in neighborho­ods and parks (progressiv­e cities even provide special walking trails), people can exercise their bodies and their aesthetic sense at the same time.”

❚ A reader from Fresno, California, who suffers from fibromyalg­ia wrote to ask whether we know of any clinical trials that she could take part in. The best resource for identifyin­g a clinical trial, which is a rigorously controlled study to evaluate a new medical, surgical or behavioral interventi­on, is the website clinicaltr­ials.gov. It’s a database that contains both privately and publicly funded clinical studies that are being conducted throughout the world. Fill in the simple form on the home page, press enter, and you’ll get a list of relevant research.

❚ We recently cited a study that evaluated changes to muscle mass in obese adults in their 60s who were dieting to lose weight. It’s an important topic because maintainin­g lean muscle mass is tied to healthy aging. The results of the study were surprising and, it seems, counterint­uitive, and we got quite a few letters. We’re happy to repeat (and confirm) the results.

In this study, participan­ts who dieted and did aerobic walking lost more muscle mass than did those who dieted and did no exercise. The group that dieted and lifted weights lost the least muscle mass. Specifical­ly, muscle mass accounted for 20 percent of weight lost in the walking group, 16 percent in the dieting alone group, and 10 percent of weight lost by the weight lifters. Total fat loss was significan­tly greater among those who combined exercise with diet than in those who only dieted. Dieters who are concerned about maintainin­g muscle mass may consider adding resistance training to their exercise routine.

Eve Glazier, M.D., MBA, is an internist and associate professor of medicine at UCLA Health. Elizabeth Ko, M.D., is an internist and assistant professor of medicine at UCLA Health.

Send your questions to askthedoct­ors@mednet.ucla.edu, or write: Ask the Doctors, c/o Media Relations, UCLA Health, 924 Westwood Blvd., Suite 350, Los Angeles, CA, 90095. Owing to the volume of mail, personal replies cannot be provided.

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