Science Daily
From the age of 30 onwards, physical inactivity
exerts a greater impact
on a woman's lifetime risk of developing heart disease than the other
well-known risk factors, suggests research published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.
This includes overweight, the finding
show, prompting the
researchers to suggest that greater effort needs to be made to promote
exercise.
The researchers wanted to quantify the
changing contribution made to a woman's likelihood of developing heart disease
across her lifetime for each of the known top four risk factors in Australia:
excess weight (high BMI); smoking; high blood pressure; and physical
inactivity. Together, these four risk factors account for over half the global prevalence of
heart disease, which remains the leading cause of death in high income
countries.
The researchers looked at the
population attributable risk (PAR) -- a mathematical formula used to define the
proportion of disease in a defined population that would disappear if exposure to
a specific risk factor were to be eliminated. They based their calculations on
estimates of the prevalence of the four risk factors among 32,154 participants
in the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health, which has been tracking
the long term health of women born in 1921-6, 1946-51, and 1973-8, since 1996. They
found that the prevalence of smoking fell from 28% in women age 22-27 to 5% in
73-78 year olds. But the
prevalence of
inactivity and high blood pressure increased steadily across the lifespan from
age 22 to 90. Overweight increased from age 22 to 64, then declined in older
age.
The researchers also used estimates of
relative risk from the Global Burden of Disease study and applied them to the
Australian women. Relative risk data indicate the likelihood that a woman with
a particular risk factor will develop heart disease compared with someone
without that risk factor.
Combining the prevalence and relative
risk data, the researchers found that up to the age of 30, smoking was the most
important contributor to heart disease, with a PAR of 59%. But from age 30 until the late 80s,
low physical activity levels were responsible for higher levels of population
risk than any of the other risk factors.
The researchers estimate that if every
woman between the ages of 30 and 90 were able to reach the recommended weekly exercise quota -- 150
minutes of at least moderate intensity physical activity -- then the
lives of more than 2000 middle aged and older women could be saved each year in
Australia alone.
The
authors conclude that the contribution of different risk factors to the
likelihood of developing heart disease changes across the lifespan.
Continuing efforts to curb smoking among the
young are warranted, they say. But much more emphasis should be placed on physical inactivity,
which, they claim, has been dwarfed
by the current focus on overweight and obesity.
"Our data suggest that national
programmes for the promotion and maintenance of physical activity, across the
adult lifespan, but especially in young adulthood, deserve to be a much higher
public health priority for women than they are now," they conclude.
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