The Wall Street
Journal
Men More Likely to
Inflate Levels of Physical Activity
By ANN LUKITS Jan. 6, 2014 6:21 p.m. ET
Danny Schwartz
Just in time for those
New Year's exercise resolutions: A new study suggests the amount of physical
activity men and women actually do is significantly less than they say they do.
Researchers found a
wide variation in physical activity reported on questionnaires compared with
objectively measured exercise time during a weeklong study reported in the
January issue of Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise. Men were more
likely than women to overestimate vigorous exercise activities, the study
found, while both sexes underestimated their sedentary times.
Researchers recruited
1,751 men and women, ages 18 to 84, from 10 regions of Norway. Close to half,
47%, were overweight or obese. Each participant was mailed a questionnaire and
an accelerometer, an activity monitor worn on the wrist. The questionnaire
assessed low, moderate and vigorous physical activity as well as sitting time
over seven consecutive days. The accelerometer measured the subjects' physical
activity levels during the same period, minus the hours from midnight to 6 a.m.
The total time spent
on physical activity measured by the accelerometer wasn't significantly
different between the sexes, but men reported 56 additional minutes of walking
and moderate exercise on questionnaires than was actually recorded by the
accelerometer. Women reported 52 additional minutes.
Self-reported vigorous
activity also conflicted with accelerometer data, which categorized activity
levels according to number of steps recorded. Men and women reported 20 minutes
and 12 minutes of vigorous activity, respectively, on the questionnaires, but
the accelerometer times were 2.9 and 2.4 minutes, respectively.
As for sedentary
times, men reported 439 minutes of sitting on questionnaires but the
accelerometer time was 565 minutes. Women's self-reported sitting time was 401
minutes and the accelerometer time was 535 minutes. The oldest subjects, ages
64 to 84, underreported sedentary times by approximately 210 minutes.
Education influenced
exercise self-reports. Participants without a college or university degree
reported 18% less sitting time than those with a college or university degree,
but the difference between the groups was 6% based on the accelerometer data.
Caveat: As questionnaires and accelerometers
were mailed, the data may not represent the same seven days for all subjects,
researchers said.
Title: Comparison of Self-reported versus Accelerometer-Measured
Physical Activity
Microcirculation: A simple test that measures how quickly
blood flows through the tiny arteries of the retina may help pinpoint patients
at risk of developing coronary atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries in
the heart, says a pilot study in the current issue of Atherosclerosis.
About 20% of patients
who undergo cardiac angiography, a common diagnostic heart procedure, have
abnormally slow blood flow in the coronary arteries but no obvious vessel
narrowing or stenosis, researchers said.
Faster blood flow in
the retina is associated with lower coronary blood flow, the study found.
Researchers recruited
28 patients from the Tel Aviv Medical Center in Israel. The patients, who were
about 59 years old and overweight, had been referred for diagnostic angiography
because of chest pain and other abnormal heart symptoms. The angiogram tests
found no apparent abnormalities in the subjects' coronary arteries, but
coronary blood flow was classified as slow in 15 and normal in 13. The
patients' retinal blood flow was assessed using an imaging technology that can
detect early changes in retinal function.
The velocity of
retinal blood flow was about 24% faster in patients with slow coronary blood
flow compared with the normal blood-flow group. The difference in velocity can
be explained by the diameters of the blood vessels, researchers said. When
large coronary vessels become constricted and lose their elasticity, the
velocity of blood flow is reduced. But the effects are reversed in the small
retinal vessels, which have to distribute the same volume of blood, causing an
increase in velocity, they said.
Caveat: The study was small.
Title: Inverse correlation between coronary
and retinal blood flows in patients with normal coronary arteries and slow
coronary blood flow
Allergies
in bed: Teenagers may be
sensitized to food allergens by simply hanging out in their bedrooms, as teens
like to do, says a study in the January issue of Clinical & Experimental
Allergy. Ingestion of various foods is believed to be the most common route of
exposure to potential food allergens in the general population, researchers
said. This study suggests mattresses can also be important reservoirs of dust
and food allergens.
From 2005 to 2007,
inspections were carried out at 143 family homes in Oslo, Norway. The families
were participants in a larger study of childhood asthma and each had a
13-year-old boy or girl at the time of the present study. About half the teens
had asthma.
A special
dust-collecting vacuum was used to vacuum the teens' mattresses, with the
sheets off, for four minutes. The dust was analyzed for milk, egg, peanut and
fish proteins, which were categorized as probable or confirmed based on the
levels detected.
Parents reported the
mattress age, teens' bed-making habits, household-cleaning practices and the
presence of furry pets. Floor plans, building materials, signs of dampness, and
the types of ventilation systems were recorded.
Peanut allergens were
confirmed in 41% and deemed probable in 34% of the 143 mattress dust samples.
Milk allergens were confirmed in 39% and probable in 29%, while egg was
confirmed in 22% and probable in 27%. Allergens from codfish, a popular
Norwegian food, were confirmed in 46% of the samples and probable in 29%. All
four allergens were found in 7% of the 143 samples and three of the four in
15%. Only three mattresses were free of any food allergens.
Mattresses in girls'
bedrooms had significantly higher levels of peanut and egg allergens than those
in boys' bedrooms. Girls may be more likely to eat in their bedrooms or have
decorative pillows and stuffed toys that act as dust and allergen reservoirs, researchers
said. About 90% of the teens had unmade beds during the day, the study found.
Caveat: The study didn't assess the effect of
food allergens on the severity of asthma or other allergic conditions.
Title: Food allergens in mattress dust in Norwegian homes – a
potentially important source of allergen exposure
Grandmother
love: The sight of
one's own grandchild activates parts of a grandmother's brain that are separate
from the brain regions associated with maternal love, indicating the two types
of love may differ, suggests a small study in the current issue of Brain
Research.
Studies have shown
mothers have different brain responses to viewing photos of their child
compared with strangers, but little is known about the neural activity
underlying grandmotherly love, researchers said.
For the study, 17
Japanese grandmothers in their early 60s viewed six videos of children, ages 1
to 2½ years old. Each video consisted of a 30-second blank display followed by
a 30-second clip of a grandchild or an unfamiliar child with a neutral
expression. This was followed a 30-second clip of the grandchild or the other
child smiling, and 30 more seconds of blank display. The grandchild and
unfamiliar child were each featured in three videos.
During the viewing,
probes attached to the participants' foreheads measured their cerebral
oxygen-hemoglobin concentrations, an indicator of blood flow in the brain,
using a neuroimaging technique that identifies changes in brain activity. After
each video, the grandmothers rated their feelings of love.
Oxygen-hemoglobin
concentrations increased in the anterior prefrontal cortex, an area of the
brain that regulates executive function, or personality, planning and decision-making,
when grandmothers viewed videos of their own grandchild but not the unfamiliar
child, regardless of the child's expression.
The sight of the
smiling grandchild increased brain activity in another region of the prefrontal
cortex related to cognition and focused concentration. Brain activations were
strongly associated with the grandmothers' emotional ratings. By comparison,
maternal love is associated with brain areas related to emotion and spontaneous
pleasure.
Researchers noted
older adults are often motivated to focus on positive things that have
emotional meaning in life. This so-called positivity shift may partly explain
the grandmothers' unique brain response to their grandchild's face, they said.
Caveat: It isn't known if the activated brain
regions are specific to grandmother love or associated with other positive
emotions.
Title: I love my grandkid! A NIRS study of
grandmaternal love in Japan
Mourning
pets: Euthanizing a
pet dog triggers intense grief reactions similar to those experienced after the
loss of friends and family members, says a report in the February issue of
Death Studies.
The study, at the
Ben-Gurion University of Negev in Israel, involved recorded interviews with 29
people who had euthanized a pet dog in the previous two weeks. The dogs were
six to 18 years old and had been sick for at least two years. About 41% of the
animals were cremated while 27.6% of owners buried the dog themselves. Owners
were asked if they'd had time to prepare for the dog's death, why they chose to
euthanize the dog or felt guilty about it, if they had other pets, and if
friends and relatives understood their grief.
Most pet owners were
still mourning the dog after two weeks but only 17% regretted the decision to
euthanize. A few reported nightmares, vomiting and other physical reactions to
the dog's death. Photos, leashes, and collars were still visible in 38% of
households.
Dying dogs often
received special attention in the form of treats and baths. Families with
children drew pictures of the dogs or wrote goodbye letters in preparation for
euthanasia. About two-thirds of owners reported positive support from
veterinarians, family members and friends.
The calmest owners
were those who performed a burial ceremony for their dogs, researchers said.
Caveat: The study was small and conducted over a
short period. Grief responses were self-reported.
Title: Grief and Bereavement of Israeli Dog
Owners: Exploring Short-Term Phases Pre- and Post-Euthanization
—Write to researchreport@WSJ.com.
A Snow Shovel That's Better For Your Back
Using an ergonomic
snow shovel, which minimizes bending, reduced the workload on the lower back by
16.5% compared with a traditional snow shovel during a simulated snow-clearing
study reported in the March issue of Applied Ergonomics. Lower-back injuries
from over-exertion account for more than a third of the estimated 12,000
snow-shoveling injuries reported in the U.S. every year, according to a 2011
study.
A new study pits a
traditional snow shovel, pictured, against an ergonomic one. Sentinel-Tribune/Associated Press
In the latest study,
University of Ottawa researchers compared the biomechanical effects of a
bent-shaft snow shovel and a straight-shaft shovel on the lumbosacral joint, a
common site of degenerative spinal conditions, in five men and three women
about 29 years old. They were 5 feet 8 inches tall, on average, and weighed
just over 160 pounds.
Reflective markers
were attached to their lower body and torso while they stood on a platform that
measured the biomechanical forces acting on each foot. Seven cameras tracked
the position of each marker as subjects shoveled a 6.5-pound bag of sand 10
times, five times with each shovel, with a one-minute rest between shoveling.
The subjects lifted the shovel to waist height and tossed the bag to the left
so only the lifting portion of the shoveling movement was analyzed, researchers
said. The marker and foot force data were used to calculate mechanical loads on
the lower back.
Seven subjects
experienced significantly reduced mechanical load with the bent-shaft shovel compared
with the standard shovel. The maximum load was reduced by 11.8% with the
bent-shaft shovel, possibly the result of reduced upper-body bending, the
researchers said.
Caveat: The study was small, used sand instead
of snow and included rest periods between shoveling motions.
Title: Influence of snow shovel shaft configuration on
lumbosacral biomechanics during a load-lifting task
—A.L.
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