News December
Weight Loss Can Mean Bone Loss
Dieters Who Don't Exercise at Risk for Weaker Bones.
Overweight dieters who cut calories but don't exercise lose more
than weight -- they lose bone mass.
That finding comes from a study by Dennis T. Villareal, MD, and
colleagues at Washington University in St. Louis.
The researchers studied 46 men and women with an average age of
57. All were overweight; none got regular exercise.
For the study, 36 of the participants agreed to lose weight. Half
of them ate less -- about 20% fewer calories. The other half worked
out more -- burning off about 20% more calories.
For comparison, 10 more participants got advice on healthy lifestyles
but didn't diet or exercise.
What happened? Compared with the 10 who only got advice, the dieters
and the exercisers both lost weight.
But, unlike the exercisers, the dieters lost more than weight.
They lost bone, too.
And they lost it in the areas where elderly people are most likely
to suffer fractures: their spines, their hips, and their upper legs.
"Calorie restriction is beneficial, but if you don't combine
it with exercise you lose bone," Villareal tells WebMD. "You
don't have to do it the way these people did, with exercise only.
"If you change your diet and exercise at the same time, it
is a win/win situation," Villareal says.
Leslie Bonci, MPH, RD, director of sports nutrition at the University
of Pittsburgh, notes that exercise stimulates bone growth.
If you just cut calories -- and don't exercise -- you harm your
bones two ways. You may cut nutrients needed to maintain strong
bones, and you don't stimulate bone growth.
"Moving is such a critical component of dieting," Bonci
tells WebMD.
"You might get lighter without exercise -- but that's because
you have less skeleton than you did before. That is a really big
concern for people as they age," she says.
The Villareal study suggests exercise can counteract the bone-loss
effect of dieting, says Edward Puzas, PhD, professor of orthopaedics
at the University of Rochester in New York.
"If you are trying to lose weight and protect your skeleton,
especially if you are an older adult, mixing diet with exercise
would be best for protecting your bones," Puzas tells WebMD.
Source http://www.webmd.com/
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