NEW ORLEANS (Reuters) – Consistent lifelong exercise  preserves heart muscle in the elderly to levels that match or even  exceed that of healthy young sedentary people, a surprising finding that  underscores the value of regular exercise training, according to a new  study.
The first study to evaluate the effects of varying levels of lifelong  exercise on heart mass was presented on Saturday at the annual  scientific meeting of the American College of Cardiology in New Orleans.
It suggested that physical activity preserves the heart's youthful  elasticity, showing that when people were sedentary, the mass of their  hearts shrunk with each passing decade.
By contrast, elderly people with a documented history of exercising six  to seven times a week throughout adulthood not only kept their heart  mass, but built upon it -- having heart masses greater than sedentary  healthy adults aged 25 to 34.
"One thing that characterizes the aging process by itself is the loss of  muscle mass, particularly skeletal muscle," said Dr. Paul Bhella, a  researcher from John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth, Texas who  presented the study at the conference.
"But we are showing that this process is not unique to skeletal muscle,  it also happens in cardiac muscle," he said. "A heart muscle that  atrophies is weaker."
The study enrolled 121 healthy people with no history of heart disease.  Fifty nine were sedentary subjects recruited from the Dallas Heart  Study, a large multiethnic sample of Dallas County residents.
Some 62 lifelong exercisers, all over age 65, were recruited mainly from  the Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study, which had documented their  exercise habits over a period of 25 years.
In the new study, exercise was assessed by the number of aerobic  exercise sessions per week, rather than intensity or duration. Subjects  were broken down into four groups: non-exercisers; casual exercisers  (two to three times a week); committed exercisers (four to five times a  week) and master athletes (six to seven times a week).
Heart mass measurements, taken using MRIs, showed that sedentary  subjects had diminished heart mass as they aged, while lifelong  exercisers had heart mass expansion with increasing frequency of  exercise. "The data suggest that if we can identify people in middle age, in the  45 to 60 year range, and get them to exercise four to five times a week,  this may go a very long way in preventing some of the major heart  conditions of old age, including heart failure," said Benjamin Levine of  the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, who headed the  study.
(Reporting by Ransdell Pierson and Bill Berkrot; Editing by Paul Simao)
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