Sterk
hart voor goede gezondheid op oude dag.*
Door niet te roken, de bloeddruk in de gaten te houden, het voorkomen van overgewicht en regelmatig bewegen blijft je hart in goede conditie waardoor de kwaliteit van leven op de oude dag veel beter is.
- Want to enjoy good health in your golden years? Take
good care of your heart, according to the findings of a new study.
Researchers report that
healthy elderly people who had low risk factors for cardiovascular disease
continued to enjoy good health longer than people with more risk factors.
"Our study is a picture
of what the future of older people could be like--the ideal golden years--if
they keep heart disease risk factors in check," the studyıs lead author Dr.
Anne B. Newman of the University of Pittsburgh said in a press release.
"Older healthy people can
maintain better- than-average quality of life, with lower rates of physical and
cognitive decline, when they refrain from smoking, lower their blood lipids,
watch blood pressure and avoid obesity through diet and exercise," Newman
added.
The study included nearly
3,000 men and women who were at least 65 years old. At the start of the study,
all of the participants had aged "successfully," meaning that they
maintained good mental and physical functioning and did not have cardiovascular
disease, cancer or chronic lung disease.
Researchers followed the
participants for eight years to see if they continued to age successfully.
Nearly half of the
participants, 48 percent, were still aging successfully at the end of the study,
Newmanıs team reports in the October 27th issue of the journal Archives of
Internal Medicine.
Not surprisingly, a person's
age at the start of the study had an important influence on the odds of aging
successfully. People 85 or older enjoyed only about one fourth the number of
healthy years as did people who were 65 to 69 at the start of the study
But within each age group, the
odds of aging successfully depended on other factors, including the presence of
"subclinical" cardiovascular disease, which does not cause symptoms
and can only be detected with diagnostic tests.
Compared with people with
subclinical cardiovascular disease, people without any signs of heart disease
continued to enjoy good health for an average of 5 to 6 years longer.
Several risk factors for heart
disease, including diabetes, smoking, high blood pressure and lack of exercise,
were also related to the odds of aging successfully. This connection is
important, according to the researchers, since these risk factors can be
modified.
Noting that current efforts to
reduce cardiovascular risk factors, such as smoking, high cholesterol, high
blood pressure and obesity, fall short of goals, Newman and her colleagues
conclude that "prevention of cardiovascular disease should be a major
priority for the achievement of successful aging."
SOURCE: Archives of Internal Medicine, 2003