The authors, led by Dr. Joao A.C. Lima, wrote, “Most large studies of CRF [cardiorespiratory fitness] focus on middle-aged and older adults, demonstrating that fitness at a single point in time is associated with risk.”
The researchers examined 4,872 adults who were part of the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study.
At the beginning of the study participants underwent a treadmill test. Seven years later, half of the participants underwent a second treadmill test. After a follow-up period of 27 years, the participants were assessed for obesity, left ventricle heart mass and strain, coronary artery calcification and cardiovascular disease.
Of the original participants 5.6 percent died during the follow-up period, and four percent experienced cardiovascular disease. Two-hundred of the 273 deaths were not cardiovascular-related and 22.5 percent were cancer-related.
The treadmill test consisted of nine two-minute tests that gradually increased the difficulty level. The researchers said that every additional minute of baseline treadmill test duration was linked with a 15 percent lower risk of death and a 12 percent lower cardiovascular disease risk.
The researchers also found that every one minute reduction in fitness by the seventh year was linked with a 21 percent increased risk of death and a 20 percent increase of cardiovascular disease. The researchers wrote, “The finding that fitness is related to development of subclinical changes in myocardial structure and function, but not CAC, sheds light on potential mechanistic benefits of exercise in youth not captured by [coronary artery calcification].”
The findings were published in JAMA Internal Medicine.
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