Men: do you want to stop your waistline from growing as you age? A new study indicates weight training may be a more effective way to keep off belly fat than cardio workouts. Researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health found that weight training worked better than moderate-to-vigorous cardio exercise for men trying to prevent an increase in age-related abdominal fat.
This was a large study of 10,500 healthy men, who tend to store fat around the abdominal area – the so-called “apple shape” – more so than women do. The researchers analyzed the exercise patterns of men aged 40 and over who participated in the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study between 1996 and 2008 to see which activities had the most influence on the men’s waistlines.
The results? The men who did just 20 minutes of daily weight training had less gain around their midsection (-.67 or minus a little over a quarter of an inch), compared to men who did cardio workouts (-.33 or -1/8 inch) and men who did only lifestyle activities like yard work (-.16 or -1/16 inch). Those who watched TV or were otherwise sedentary only gained more belly fat.
The researchers concluded that, while weight training “had the strongest inverse relation with [waist circumference] change, [moderate-to-vigorous aerobic activity] had the strongest inverse relation with body weight change.”
Reference:
- Mekary RA, et al. Weight training, aerobic physical activities, and long-term waist circumference change in men. Obesity. 2015;23(2):461-467.
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