DOC News January 1, 2008
Volume 5 Number 1 p. 10
© 2008 American Diabetes Association
Everyday Walking Linked to Lower Cardiovascular Risk
Bruce Goldfarb
Just walking frequently appears to help lower cardiovascular risk
factors—independent of other physical activity, according to research
presented at the annual meeting of The Obesity Society, held October
20–24 in New Orleans.
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IMAGESHOP/JUPITER IMAGES
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Investigators analyzed data from the Coronary Artery Risk Development in
Young Adults (CARDIA) study to assess the relationship between walking and
cardiovascular risk factors. While previous research shows that walking
prevents weight gain, few long-term studies have been done to evaluate the
effect of the activity on cardiovascular risks, according to Ningqi Hou, PhD,
a researcher at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
CARDIA is a prospective study of about 4,700 people who were 18–30
years old at baseline, 1985–1986. Participants were recruited in
Birmingham, Ala., Oakland, Calif., Chicago, and Minneapolis and have been
followed for 20 years.
Using data from the 15-year follow-up of CARDIA participants, Hou and
colleagues compared levels of walking and other physical activities, as well
as such cardiovascular risk factors as lipid profiles, blood pressure, and
fasting blood glucose and insulin levels. Walking was assessed by
self-reporting and an assigned walking score based on an individual's physical
activity history.
When controlling for other factors, such as smoking, alcohol consumption,
body mass index, and socioeconomic status, researchers discovered a modest but
significant association between walking and cardiovascular risk factors.
Compared with those who didn't walk, individuals who walked >4 hours per
week had higher HDL cholesterol and lower serum triglycerides and fasting
insulin levels.
"The associations were still strong even when controlling for other
non-walking physical activity," Hou says.
Although the clinical effect of walking was not large, walking is a low
intensity activity that should be encouraged among patients, Hou advises.
"Walking is affordable, convenient, and easy to incorporate into a daily
routine," she adds.

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