Study Supports Exercise to Lower the Risk of Parkinson Disease
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Study Supports Exercise to Lower the Risk of Parkinson Disease
Jim Windell
Following more than 95,000 female adults for three decades reveals what helps to protect women from Parkinson’s disease.
This study, published recently in Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology, included 95,354 female participants, mostly teachers, with an average age of 49 who did not have Parkinson’s disease at the start of the study. The researchers followed participants for some 30 years, during which time 1,074 participants developed Parkinson’s disease.
Over the course of the study, participants completed up to six questionnaires about the types and amounts of physical activity they were getting. They were asked how far they walked and how many flights of stairs they climbed daily, how many hours they spent on household activities as well as how much time they spent doing moderate recreational activities such as gardening and more vigorous activities such as sports. Then, the researchers assigned each activity a score based on the metabolic equivalent of a task (METs), a way to quantify energy expenditure. For each activity, METs were multiplied by their frequency and duration to obtain a physical activity score of METs-hours per week. For example, a more intense form of exercise like cycling was six METs, while less intense forms of exercise such as walking and cleaning were three METs. The average physical activity level for participants was 45 METs-hours per week at the start of the study.
Finally, the participants were divided into four equal groups of just over 24,000 people each. At the start of the study, those in the highest group had an average physical activity score of 71 METs-hours per week. Those in the lowest group had an average score of 27 METs-hours per week.
The results showed that the participants in the highest exercise group experienced only 246 cases of Parkinson’s disease (0.55 cases per 1,000 person-years) compared to 286 cases (0.73 per 1,000 person-years) among participants in the lowest exercise group. Person-years represent both the number of people in the study and the amount of time each person spends in the study.
After adjusting for factors such as place of residence, age of first period and menopausal status, and smoking, researchers found those in the highest exercise group had a 25% lower rate of developing Parkinson’s disease than those in the lowest exercise group when physical activity was assessed up to 10 years before diagnosis; the association remained when physical activity was assessed up to 15 or 20 years before diagnosis. Results were similar after adjusting for diet or medical conditions such as high blood pressure, diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
The study also found that 10 years before diagnosis, physical activity declined at a faster rate in those with Parkinson’s disease than in those without – perhaps due to early symptoms of Parkinson’s disease.
According to study author Alexis Elbaz, M.D., Ph.D., of the Inserm Research Center in Paris, France, “With our large study, not only did we find that female participants who exercise the most have a lower rate of developing Parkinson’s disease, we also showed that early symptoms of Parkinson’s disease were unlikely to explain these findings, and instead that exercise is beneficial and may help delay or prevent this disease.”
Elbaz went on to say that the results support the creation of exercise programs to help lower the risk of Parkinson’s disease.
To read the study plus a related article about the study, find then with these references:
Chahine, L. M. & Darweesh, S.K.L. (2023). Physical Activity and the Risk of Parkinson Disease: Moving in the Right Direction. Neurology. doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000207527.
Portugal, B., Artaud, F., Degaey, I., Roze, E., Fournier, A., Severi, G., Canonico, M., Proust-Lima, C. & Elbaz, A. (2023). Association of Physical Activity and Parkinson Disease in Women: Long-term Follow-up of the E3N Cohort Study. Neurology, 10.1212/WNL.0000000000207424; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000207424