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For chronically Illness Exercise Can Be Used as Medicine |
Exercise regularly may brighten the mood of people with
chronic health problems like cancer, heart disease and back pain, according to
the first sweeping look at previous research.
But it's no miracle cure: On average, six people would need
to hit the gym or go for a jog for one person to see a mood improvement.
"It's a nice piece of evidence and I'm pleased because
I like the concept," said Dr. Alan J. Gelenberg, who chairs the department
of psychiatry at Penn State University in Hershey.
Gelenberg, who wasn't involved in the new work, said the
findings jibe with guidelines from the American Psychiatric Association, which
recommends regular exercise against the blues.
"There is some evidence for its use to prevent
depression, and there actually is evidence for exercise as a treatment in
itself," he told Reuters Health.
With the new study, published in the Archives of Internal
Medicine, researchers wanted to weigh the evidence that training can also help
chronically ill people who don't have a diagnosis of depression, but
nonetheless may feel down.
That's important because depressive symptoms could make
people less likely to take their meds, could increase their use of health
services and decrease their quality of life, said Matthew Herring of the
University of Alabama at Birmingham.
He and his colleagues combed through 90 previous studies
including more than 10,000 people with health problems like cancer, heart
disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD), fibromyalgia, chronic
pain or obesity.
In each study, people had been randomly chosen to do
exercises -- on average, three times a week over 17 weeks -- or not.
According to Herring, people's depressive symptoms, as rated
on a variety of psychological scales, dropped about 22 percent with exercise
overall. That's similar to the effects on fatigue, anxiety, pain and other
mental health outcomes.
"The magnitude of the effect of exercise training on
depressive symptoms among patients found in our review is small but
significant," he told Reuters Health by email.
Herring added that moderate -- at least 150 minutes of
moderate intensity exercise per week -- and vigorous -- at least 75 minutes of
vigorous intensity exercise per week -- seemed to help the most.
HOW LONG WILL BENEFITS LAST?
Still, the report comes with several caveats. For instance,
it's not clear how many people with chronic illnesses are able to work out at
sufficient intensity, and many participants did in fact drop out of the
studies.
Also, it's not clear how long the effects last, how much to
exercise and what kind of exercise works better -- aerobic training like
running or walking or strength training like weightlifting.
"What we don't know is much more than we do know,"
said Gelenberg.
Still, he added, "exercise has a lot of benefits... if
someone doesn't exercise in a stupid way, like a 65-year-old man trying to
bench press 200 pounds."
Gelenberg said people with chronic disease who feel
depressed should exercise within a physician's guidelines and eat a healthy
diet.
"I would suggest they indulge themselves in healthy
pleasures: people, books, walks, sitting in a pretty place. If they still feel
'down,' I'd suggest professional attention to consider psychotherapy or an
antidepressant medicine," he said.
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