Study: Exercise
like a drug in heart disease
Saturday, January 25, 2003
Posted: 6:15 AM EST (1115 GMT) WASHINGTON
(Reuters) --
Exercise can act like
a drug on the blood vessels, reducing the risk of heart disease by literally
getting the blood flowing, U.S. researchers said this week.
It works in a
surprising way, reducing inflammation, which has recently joined high blood
pressure and high cholesterol as a leading known cause of heart disease, the
researchers said. The blood stresses
the walls of blood vessels as it passes over them, reducing inflammation in a
way similar to high doses of steroids, the researchers reported in Friday's
issue of Circulation Research. "Inflammation
in blood vessels has been linked to atherosclerosis, a hardening of the
arteries, and here we see how the physical force of blood flow can cause cells
to produce their own anti-inflammatory response," Scott Diamond of the the
University of Pennsylvania's Institute for Medicine and Engineering, said in a
statement. "Conceivably,
exercise provides the localized benefits of glucocorticoids -- just as potent as
high doses of steroids, yet without all the systemic side effects of taking the
drugs themselves," added Diamond, who led the study. "Perhaps this
is a natural way in which exercise helps protect the vessels, by stimulating an
anti-inflammatory program when the vessels are exposed to elevated blood
flow." Reducing
inflammation
The
findings could help explain why exercise works so well to reduce the risk of
heart disease, Diamond said. "We're
not talking about running a marathon here. We're just talking about getting the
blood moving at high arterial levels," he said. Studies
in recent years have found that cells and chemicals linked with inflammation can
be found in arterial clogs, and much research is now focusing on ways to reduce
this inflammation. For instance, teams are investigating whether giving patients
antibiotics or anti-inflammatory drugs lowers their risk of heart disease. Diamond
has worked using human arteries in the lab but wants to move into animals to
confirm his hypothesis. "Think
of blood flow as a stream -- whenever a stream branches off you get small areas
of recirculation eddies or pools of stagnant water," he said. "These
same situations of disturbed flow irritate the endothelium (the lining of the
blood vessels). When blood vessels branch off, all the arterial flotsam -- fats
and activated blood cells -- can clump and stick at these hot spots for
atherosclerotic plaque formation," he added. "Perhaps,
elevated blood flow may alter these disease-prone regions to relieve some of the
localized inflammation."
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