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Wednesday, November 19, 2014

A medium amount of physical activity can lower the risk of Parkinson's disease



November 19, 2014 - 12:31am

A new study, published online in Brain: A Journal of Neurology today, followed 43,368 
individuals in Sweden for an average of 12.6 years to examine the impact of physical 
activity on Parkinson's disease risk. It was found that "a medium amount" of physical 
activity lowers the risk of Parkinson's disease.
Karin Wirdefeldt of the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm and her colleagues used the 
Swedish National March Cohort to analyse comprehensive information on physical 
activity of all kinds. They assessed household and commuting activity, occupational 
activity, leisure time exercise, and total daily physical activity according to data 
provided by 27,863 females and 15,505 males as part of an extensive questionnaire
For the purpose of this study, physical activity was quantified into metabolic equivalent 
(MET) hours per day, based on estimated oxygen consumption associated with those
 activities.
All participants were free of Parkinson's disease on 1 October 1997, the start of the 
follow-up period. Study participants were followed from this baseline until date of 
diagnosis with Parkinson's disease, date of death, date of emigration, or the end of 
the follow-up period on 31 December 2010, whichever came first. In that time 286 
cases of Parkinson's disease were identified.
In the study's multivariable-adjusted model, compared with participants who spent 
less than two hours per week on household and commuting activity, those who spent 
more than six hours per week on the same types of activities had a 43% lower risk of 
developing Parkinson's disease. Compared with a low level of total physical activity, a 
medium level of total physical activity (a mean of 39.1 MET hours per day) was 
associated with a 45% lower Parkinson's disease risk in males. Leisure time exercise 
was not associated with Parkinson's disease risk when analysed alone. 
Karin Wirdefeldt, researcher at the Department of Medical Epidemiology and 
Biostatistics and Department of Clinical Neuroscience, who headed the study, said: 
"Our study has a number of strengths. This was a prospective study including both 
males and females, and all information on physical activity was assessed before the 
disease occurrence, making recall bias and reverse causation less likely." 
"Another major strength of this study is that we considered the entire spectrum of daily 
energy output, rather than purely focusing on dedicated exercising. Further, we 
conducted a rich set of sensitivity analyses to test the robustness of our findings."
"We found that a medium level of daily total physical activity is associated with a lower 
risk of Parkinson's disease. The protective effect of physical activity was further 
supported when we summarized all available evidence from published prospective 
cohort studies. These findings are important for both the general population and for 
the healthcare of patients with Parkinson's disease."

http://www.sciencecodex.com/a_medium_amount_of_physical_activity_can_lower_the_risk_of_parkinsons_disease-145915

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