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Your body's big enemy? Youre sitting on it
Most of us spend our days on our behinds and
its killing us
By Selene Yeager Womens Health
updated 7:38 a.m. ET, Wed.,
Dec . 9, 2009
You might not want to take the following stat
sitting down: According to a poll of nearly 6,300 people by the
Institute for Medicine and Public Health, it's likely that you spend a
stunning 56 hours a week planted like a geranium staring at your
computer screen, working the steering wheel, or collapsed in a heap in
front of your high-def TV. And it turns out women may be more sedentary
than men, since they tend to play fewer sports and hold less active
jobs.
Even if you think you have an energetic
lifestyle, sitting is how most of us spend a good part of our day. And
it's killing us literally by way of obesity, heart disease, and
diabetes. All this downtime is so unhealthy that it's given birth to a
new area of medical study called inactivity physiology, which explores
the effects of our increasingly butt-bound, tech-driven lives, as well
as a deadly new epidemic researchers have dubbed "sitting
disease."
The modern-day desk sentence
"Our bodies have evolved over millions of years to do one
thing: move," says James Levine, M.D., Ph.D., of the Mayo Clinic in
Rochester, Minn., and author of "Move a Little, Lose a Lot."
"As human beings, we evolved to stand upright. For thousands of
generations, our environment demanded nearly constant physical
activity."
But thanks to technological advances, the
Internet, and an increasingly longer work week, that environment has
disappeared. "Electronic living has all but sapped every flicker of
activity from our daily lives," Levine says. You can shop, pay
bills, make a living, and with Twitter and Facebook, even catch up with
friends without so much as standing up. And the consequences of all that
easy living are profound.
When you sit for an extended period of time, your body starts to shut
down at the metabolic level, says Marc Hamilton, Ph.D., associate
professor of biomedical sciences at the University of Missouri. When
muscles especially the big ones meant for movement, like those in
your legs are immobile, your circulation slows and you burn fewer
calories. Key flab-burning enzymes responsible for breaking down
triglycerides (a type of fat) simply start switching off. Sit for a full
day and those fat burners plummet by 50 percent, Levine says.
That's not all. The less you move, the less blood sugar your body uses;
research shows that for every two hours spent on your backside per day,
your chance of contracting diabetes goes up by 7 percent. Your risk for
heart disease goes up, too, because enzymes that keep blood fats in
check are inactive. You're also more prone to depression: With less
blood flow, fewer feel-good hormones are circulating to your brain.
Spending the day on your rear is also hell on
your posture and spine health, says Douglas Lentz, a certified strength
and conditioning specialist and the director of fitness and wellness for
Summit Health in Chambersburg, Pa. "When you sit all day, your hip
flexors and hamstrings shorten and tighten, while the muscles that
support your spine become weak and stiff," he says. It's no wonder
that the incidence of chronic lower-back pain among women has increased
threefold since the early 1990s.
And even if you exercise, you're not immune. Consider this: We've become
so sedentary that 30 minutes a day at the gym may not do enough to
counteract the detrimental effects of eight, nine, or 10 hours of
sitting, says Genevieve Healy, Ph.D., a research fellow at the Cancer
Prevention Research Centre of the University of Queensland in Australia.
That's one big reason so many women still struggle with weight, blood
sugar, and cholesterol woes despite keeping consistent workout routines.
In a recent study, Healy and her colleagues found that regardless of how
much moderate to vigorous exercise participants did, those who took more
breaks from sitting throughout the day had slimmer waists, lower BMIs
(body mass indexes), and healthier blood fat and blood sugar levels than
those who sat the most. In an extensive study of 17,000 people, Canadian
researchers drew an even more succinct conclusion: The longer you spend
sitting each day, the more likely you are to die an early death no
matter how fit you are.
The non-exercise answer
So if exercise alone isn't the
solution, what is? Fortunately, it's easier than you think to ward off
the perils of prolonged parking. Just ramp up your daily non-exercise
activity thermogenesis or NEAT. That's the energy (i.e., calories)
you burn doing everything but exercise. It's having sex, folding
laundry, tapping your toes, and simply standing up. And it can be the
difference between wearing a sarong or flaunting your bikini on your
next beach vacation.
In his groundbreaking study on NEAT, the Mayo Clinic's Levine used
motion-sensing underwear (hot, huh?) to track every single step and
fidget of 20 people who weren't regular exercisers (half of them were
obese; half were not). After 10 days, he found that the lean
participants moved an average of 150 minutes more per day than the
overweight people did enough to burn 350 calories, or about one
cheeseburger.
Fidgeting, standing, and puttering may even keep you off medications and
out of the doctor's office. Think of your body as a computer: As long as
you're moving the mouse and tapping the keys, all systems are go. But
let it idle for a few minutes, and the machine goes into
power-conservation mode. Your body is meant to be active, so when you
sit and do nothing for too long, it shuts down and burns less energy.
Getting consistent activity throughout the day keeps your metabolism
humming along in high gear.
When you get out of your chair and start moving around, you turn on fat
burners. Simply standing up fries three times as many calories as
sitting on your butt, according to Levine. And, he adds, "NEAT
activity can improve blood flow and increase the amount of serotonin
available to the brain, so that your thinking becomes sharper and you'll
be less likely to feel depressed."
Get your move on
Shake things up throughout the day by
interrupting your sedentary stints as often as possible. "Stand up
every half hour," says Neville Owen, Ph.D., of the University of
Queensland. "If you have to sit for longer than that, take more
extended and active breaks and move around for a few minutes before
sitting back down."
When you're reading e-mail and taking phone calls, do it standing. Walk
with colleagues to brainstorm ideas. And consider trading your chair for
a large stability ball. "It forces you to engage your muscles, and
you're likely to stand up more because you're not melting into a
chair," Lentz says.
At home, it's simple: Limit TV time to two hours a day or less. Better
yet, watch it from a treadmill or exercise bike. Among women, the risk
for metabolic syndrome a constellation of health woes including high
blood pressure, high cholesterol, and high blood sugar shoots up 26
percent for every hour per day they spend watching the tube.
Not sure how much of a difference these mini moves will make? Swapping a
more active approach for just a few of your daily activities can help
stave off the one-to two-pound weight gain most women accumulate every
year and it can keep your metabolism buzzing the way nature intended
it to.
© 2009 Rodale Inc. All rights reserved.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34209499/ns/health-fitness/
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