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BBC News Online: Health
Thursday, 9 July, 1998, 20:19 GMT 21:19 UK
Cholesterol danger from binge exercising
Vigorous spurts of exercise may not lower cholesterol
Sporadic exercise can actually increase your cholesterol levels and lead to a greater risk of suffering a stroke or heart attack, according to new research.
Researchers from the Emory University School of Medicine in Georgia have discovered that regular exercise protects the body by increasing the number of cholesterol-fighting molecules.
But experiments on students who had just started doing exercise classes showed short bursts of activity either had no effect on cholesterol or increased it, they said.
This will be bad news for the many who adopt a binge and starve approach to exercise.
Vaccine
Writing in the Journal of the American Heart Association, Sampath Parthasarathy says regular exercise acts like a vaccine on the immune system, reducing heart disease.
But there is some good cheer for those who convince themselves that doing the odd bit of running, aerobics or football during the summer allows them to spend most of the rest of the year on the sofa, watching TV.
Parthasarathy says that short-term exercise does help filter cholesterol out of the bloodstream and into the liver, where it is less harmful.
Related to this story:
Older women to get health tips
(23 Jun 98 | Health)
Elbow grease: the only way to healthy heart
(02 Jul 98 | Health)
Internet links:
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American Heart Association |
Cholesterol links |
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