The Encore Fitness Blog Resources and information from top Las Vegas personal trainers, fitness and dietary experts. Carol Strom.

May 30, 2012

Jogging Fights Beer Belly Fat Better Than Weights

Weight training is touted as the cure for many ills. But if the goal is to lose belly fat, aerobic exercise is the only way to go, exercise scientists say.

We’re not talking about muffin tops, the annoying bit of pudge that rolls over a woman’s waistline and is featured in those strange Internet ads. Rather, this is gut fat lodged around internal organs, which could look like a beer belly from the outisde. It’s considered a risk factor for diabetes, heart disease, and cancer.

Surprisingly little research has been done comparing the health benefits of strength training with weights to aerobic exercise such as walking. But that’s just what researchers at Duke University did.

They compared changes in visceral fat – the fat that wraps around internal organs – in people who did strength training compared to a group who did aerobic exercise. They divided 198 overweight, sedentary adults into groups, with one group working out with weights three times a week for eight months. A second group jogged 12 miles a week.

The aerobic exercisers lost significant amounts of visceral fat, as well as fat around the liver. They also lost abdominal fat overall, and had improvements in liver enzymes and insulin resistance. By contrast, the people who were pumping iron lost a wee bit of subcutaneous fat, but their stats otherwise didn’t improve. The aerobic training burned 67 percent more calories than resistance training. The results were published in theAmerican Journal of Physiology.

“Resistance training is a very good way to increase lean muscle,” Cris Slentz, an exercise physiologist at Duke who led the study, told Shots. “And aerobic exercise isn’t.” But if the goal is to lose fat, then aerobic exercise is the ticket, he said.

There’s no easy way to know how much visceral fat a person has; the researchers had to put people in CT scans to measure it. But one good clue is a beer belly. And men tend to carry more visceral fat than women, Slentz says, while white people tend to have more visceral fat than African Americans. And older people tend to internalize fat, while younger people carry fat right beneath their dewy skin.

 

Source: NPR

December 10, 2010

Stay Fit To Reduce Risk Of Stroke

If you want to avoid a stroke, you can start by living a healthier life.

Eat well and stay fit to keep a stroke at bay. Courtesy of NPR

Shed those extra pounds if you’re overweight, exercise regularly, eat more fruits and vegetables and less salt, say guidelines just released by the American Heart Association and American Stroke Association. Oh, and don’t smoke, please. Although drinking a little wouldn’t hurt and might help.

There’s a lot of advice for preventing a first stroke, most of it for doctors. There are specific recommendations for blood pressure targets, diabetic patients (who are at higher stroke risk) and when to recommend aspirin (only for people at especially high risk.

The guidelines, which were last revised in 2006, run nearly 70 pages. The executive summary is six-pages long!

But the most important advice is pretty simple. Living better can cut the risk of a first stroke by 80 percent, Duke’s Dr. Larry B. Goldstein tells Medscape. “There’s virtually nothing that we can do with medicine or interventions of any kind that’s going to have that kind of impact, so that I think is of paramount importance,” says Goldstein, a stroke specialist who chaired the guideline group.

Prevention is key because more than three-quarters of the nearly 800,000 people who have strokes in this country each year are having first strokes.

“Between 1999 and 2006, there’s been over a 30 percent reduction in stroke death rates in the United States and we think the majority of the reduction is coming from better prevention,” Goldstein says in a statement.

If you or someone close to you has a stroke, it’s important to get to the hospital as quickly as possible. Most strokes are caused by blood clots. A drug that dissolves clots can go a long way toward saving lives and reducing disability if it’s given in time, as NPR’s Richard Knox reported last year.

Finally, some hospitals in the country are certified as stroke centers, meaning they provide state-of-the-art care. If you’d like to find one nearby, check out this database.

Original article courtesy of NPR’s Health Blog

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