Aerobically
Unfit Young Adults on Road to Diabetes in Middle Age
Young
African-Americans, women at higher risk
CHICAGO
--- Most healthy 25 year olds don't stay up at night worrying whether
they are going to develop diabetes in middle age. The disease is
not on their radar, and middle age is a lifetime away.
As
it turns out, many should be concerned. Researchers at Northwestern
University Feinberg School of Medicine have found that young adults
(18 to 30 years old) with low aerobic fitness levels --as measured
by a treadmill test -- are two to three times more likely to develop
diabetes in 20 years than those who are fit.
The
study also shows that young women and young African Americans are
less aerobically fit than men and white adults in the same age group,
placing a larger number of these population subgroups at risk for
diabetes.
"These
young adults are setting the stage for chronic disease in middle
age by not being physically active and fit," said Mercedes
Carnethon, lead author and assistant professor of preventive medicine
at Northwestern's Feinberg School. "People who have low fitness
in their late teens and 20's tend to stay the same later in life
or even get worse. Not many climb out of that category."
The
study will be published in the July issue of Diabetes Care.
In
the study, the most important predictor of who will develop diabetes
is the participants' Body Mass Index (BMI), a measure of the body's
fat content.
"The
overwhelming importance of a high BMI to the development of diabetes
was somewhat unexpected and leads us to think that activity levels
need to be adequate not only to raise aerobic fitness, but also
to maintain a healthy body weight," Carnethon said. "If
two people have a similar level of fitness, the person with the
higher BMI is more likely to develop diabetes."
Carnethon
stressed that unfit young adults can avoid a future with diabetes
by exercising and losing weight. "Improving your fitness through
physical activity is one way you can modify your body fat,"
she said. "Research shows that combining regular physical activity
with a carefully balanced diet can help most people maintain a healthy
body weight and lower the likelihood of developing diabetes."
This
is the longest observational study to focus on the relationship
between aerobic fitness and the development of diabetes. Most previous
research has focused on the self-reported health behavior of physical
activity, but people don't always accurately report their activity
level. Fitness, easily measured by a standard treadmill test, provides
a more accurate measure than a self-report.
In
addition, this study is the first to look at the development of
diabetes over a 20- year period. Because diabetes develops over
a long period of time, the number of people affected in the population
rises with age. Previous studies that followed adults for a shorter
period of time may have stopped short before diabetes was diagnosed.
Data
from the study came from the Coronary Artery Risk Development in
Young Adults (CARDIA) study, which began in January 1984 and ended
in December 2001. The fitness study included 3,989 participants
at baseline and 2,231 at the 20-year testing. The black and white
men and women were 18 to 30 at the time of enrollment. Fasting blood
sugar levels (the blood marker used to define diabetes) were measured
at the beginning of the study and multiple times over 20 years.
###
The
study was funded by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute.
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