Arab Times

Pool exercise may cut falls

Aquatic aerobics build strength Black women most likely to put on pounds

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NEW YORK, April 13, (RTRS): Women who did a high-intensity aquatic workout for six months increased their strength and suffered fewer falls, in a new study that suggests bone- and muscle-building resistance can be achieved with the right kinds of water exercises.

“What we did was to test the model for muscle training in the gyms and put it inside the pools,” said lead author Linda Moreira, a researcher at the Universida­de Federal de Sao Paulo.

The study should encourage postmenopa­usal women at risk for osteoporot­ic bone-thinning that pool-based exercise can increase muscle and bone strength, according to Moreira’s team.

Aquatic aerobics became popular in the 1990s as a way for older people to exercise without straining their joints or being injured in falls.

However, aquatic exercise fell out of favor, experts said, because of concerns that the bone and muscle-building benefits of resisting gravity in standard exercises were diminished when someone is buoyant in water.

Resistance To test a water workout Moreira’s group designed to increase resistance and build strength, they recruited just over 100 inactive women in their 50s and 60s.

All the women took 1,000 internatio­nal units of vitamin D3 and 500 milligrams of calcium daily — both vitamins known to help build bone and muscle — during the six-month study.

Half the women were also assigned to an aquatic exercise program, which Moreira’s group created to combat osteoporos­is by preventing falls, and named HydrOS.

Instead of the more typical high-repetition, low-impact aqua-aerobics, the HydrOS interval training included bursts of intense activity between 10 to 30 seconds at up to 90 percent of maximum heart rate. The water created the resistance that weights would provide on land, Moreira said.

Seven months later, the number of falls among aquatic exercisers had dropped 86 percent, and the number of women who suffered falls dropped 44 percent. In the sedentary group, the number of falls remained unchanged, according to results published in the journal Menopause.

The researcher­s also found that flexibilit­y plus hand, back, hip and knee strength increased in the aquatic exercisers. The women in the sedentary group showed mild increases in balance and strength as well, but the researcher­s attributed those improvemen­ts to the calcium and vitamin D supplement­s.

As people age, they lose muscles used for quick movements that stimulate bone health. But, according to Moreira, typical aquatic aerobics work muscles used for slower day-to-day movement.

“Physical instructor­s were training the

He estimated that the measures would lead to savings of 354 million reais ($179 million) over five years, because the government currently imports most of the wrong muscle type,” she said.

About a quarter of the study participan­ts had osteoporos­is, half were at the beginning stage of the bone disease and the remaining quarter had normal bones.

“There’s this bias in the osteoporos­is community against doing any waterbased exercise,” said Andrea LaCroix, a researcher at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, who studies health in older women. LaCroix was not involved in the current study.

“This study goes in the face of that,” LaCroix told Reuters Health. “If they show changes in bone density, that would be quite amazing and novel and will be a paradigm changer in terms of osteoporos­is prevention.”

Health Moreira told Reuters Health that another soon-to-be-published paper will show that over the six months of the study, the aquatic exercise group maintained bone mineral density in their femur leg bones while the sedentary women lost 1.2 percent of bone density.

Very little is known about how water medicines involved and makes them available to the national health system.

“To produce here in Brazil means a saving for the government and the consumer,” exercise can improve health in older adults, said Wendy Kohrt, professor of medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. Kohrt was not involved in the current study.

“Without knowing what the benefits are, it’s difficult to recommend water exercise; (the study) fills a gap in knowledge that is a pretty big gap,” Kohrt added.

“Improvemen­ts tended to be small (with the aquatic approach). It’s a little difficult to judge just how effective this type of exercise program is,” Kohrt told Reuters Health.

Kohrt noted that one serious limitation of the study was that researcher­s didn’t use equipment that could maximize muscle resistance.

“There are ways to use devices in water to make it a more effective strength training approach,” Korht said, such as moving a milk jug or webbed object through the water.

“The next step is to find out whether water exercise can be as effective as more traditiona­l land-based types of exercises,” Kohrt said. the Padilha said. “These products can lead to price reductions for the consumer.”

He made the announceme­nt at a meeting hosted by the Federation of Industries of the State of Sao Paolo.

He said the government would extend seven billion reais ($3.5 billion) in credits to Brazilian firms involved in innovative health projects and pump another 1.3 billion reais ($651 million) into the infrastruc­ture of public laboratori­es. (AFP) Womb transplant woman pregnant: The first woman ever to receive a uterus from a deceased donor, is two-weeks pregnant following a successful embryo transplant, her doctors said on Friday in Istanbul.

The 22-year-old Derya Sert was revealed to be almost two-weeks pregnant in preliminar­y results after in vitro fertilisat­ion at Akdeniz University Hospital in Turkey’s southern province of Antalya, her doctor Mustafa Unal said in a written statement.

“She is doing just fine at the moment,” Unal said.

Sert was described as a “medical miracle” when she became the first woman in the world to have a successful womb transplant from a dead donor in August 2011 at the same Antalya hospital.

The groundbrea­king news of her pregnancy will rekindle hopes for thousands of childless women across the world who are unable to bear their own babies. (AFP)

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