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Spot
Light : Exercise, Even Late in Pregnancy, Seems
Beneficial
By
Suzanne Rostler
NEW YORK,
Mar 20 (Reuters Health) - Regular exercise during pregnancy
can help women and their newborns, but the particulars of
this benefit depend on the intensity and timing of the
exercise regimen, study findings suggest.
Previous
studies have shown that, in general, women who exercise
throughout their pregnancies have larger placentas than
their more sedentary peers but that a more intense exercise
regimen may result in babies who weigh less at birth.
The volume
of the placenta is a general marker of the structure's
ability to transport oxygen and nutrients to the fetus, Dr.
James F. Clapp III, lead author of the current study,
explained in an interview with Reuters Health.
In their
study, Clapp and colleagues found that women who exercised
at the same rate throughout their pregnancy, or boosted the
intensity of their exercise regimen later in pregnancy, gave
birth to infants who were lighter and had less body fat than
women who slowed down in the final trimester.
However,
none of the babies born to women who exercised moderately or
intensely through the ninth month were considered low birth
weight, according to the report published in a recent issue
of the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Low
birth weight is associated with developmental problems in
childhood and may be linked to heart disease and other
health problems later in life.
The
findings indicate "that regular weight-bearing exercise
is beneficial for both mother and baby and that the amount
of benefit varies with the timing and amount of
exercise," Clapp told Reuters Health. "If the
woman is healthy and the pregnancy normal, regular exercise
can do nothing but improve the situation."
Clapp and
colleagues from Case Western Reserve University in
Cleveland, Ohio assigned 75 women who exercised regularly to
one of three aerobic exercise programs during their eighth
week of pregnancy. Women worked out on a treadmill, took
step aerobics or used a stair-stepping machine.
Women in
the "Lo-Hi" group did 20 minutes of aerobic
exercise 5 days a week and increased the duration to 60
minutes by the 24th week of pregnancy until their delivery.
Women in the "Hi-Lo" group exercised for 60
minutes 5 days a week through week 20 and then decreased the
duration to 20 minutes from week 24 until the end of the
pregnancy.
In the
third group, women exercised for 40 minutes 5 days a week
throughout their pregnancy.
Infants of
women who exercised intensely in the middle or late stages
of pregnancy were significantly lighter and had less body
fat than infants born to the moderate exercisers, although
none of the infants were small enough to be at risk for
medical or developmental problems.
Women who
exercised vigorously early on and then reduced the intensity
of their program as they approached their due dates weighed
more and had heavier placentas than women in the other
groups. While a heavier placenta can be protective in some
cases, the heavy exercisers did not have dangerously light
placentas, Clapp said.
He suggests
that future studies investigate the use of exercise as a way
to prevent complications in certain individuals, including
women at risk of delivering premature and low birth weight
babies, as well as the effects of different types of
workouts such as scuba diving and spinning.
SOURCE:
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology
2002;186:142-147.
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