Long, slow walks may beat shorter, higher intensity runs

By Linda Carroll

Forget about busting your buns on the treadmill. A small new study suggests

that you ll be healthier if you spend your time taking long, slow walks and

standing instead of sitting whenever possible.

For those who detest working up a sweat at the gym this might sound too good to

be true. But researchers have found that it may be more important to reduce

your hours sitting than it is to exercise vigorously, according to the study

published in PLOS ONE.

In fact, when volunteers spent two hours standing and four hours walking each

day they had healthier insulin levels and lower triglycerides than when they

spent an hour a day at the gym cycling for all they were worth, Norwegian

researchers found. And that was true even though the volunteers burned nearly

the same amount of calories whether they were cycling or slow walking: The main

difference was in the number of hours spent sitting.

Our experimental study on minimal activity showed that reducing sitting time

causes improvement in health risk markers, says study co-author Hans

Savelberg, an associate professor at Maastricht University.

Dr. Karol Watson, an expert unaffiliated with the new study, agrees.

Man was meant to walk and to walk a lot, says Watson, an associate

professor of cardiology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at the

University of California, Los Angeles, and co-director of the UCLA Center for

Cholesterol and Lipid Management. That doesn t mean marathons, but rather to

move around a lot.

For the new study, Savelberg and his colleagues asked 18 normal weight college

students to consecutively spend several days in one of three regimes: sitting

for 14 hours a day with no exercise; sitting for 13 hours a day with one hour

spent cycling vigorously while monitored by a researcher; and sitting 8 hours a

day, walking for four hours, and standing for two hours."

The students were all asked to wear monitors that kept track of their movements

so researchers knew they were following instructions.

After each phase of the experiment, the researchers measured study volunteers

insulin sensitivity and blood lipid levels. Insulin sensitivity is important

because it is a predictor of diabetes risk, while lipid levels give doctors a

window on heart disease risk.

Not surprisingly, when the volunteers sat all day without any exercise, they

burned fewer calories. The four hours of leisurely walking burned about the

same number of calories as pedal-to-the-metal cycling for an hour.

Couch potato behavior led to the worst insulin, cholesterol and triglyceride

measurements. But the intriguing finding was that the measurements were far

better when the students spent six hours a day walking and standing than they

were when volunteers vigorously exercised an hour a day. Triglycerides, for

example, barely improved with vigorous exercise, but were 22 percent better

when volunteers spent only 8 hours a day sitting.

The new findings are the latest in a raft of research suggesting that sitting

is bad for us. The first hints that couch-potato behavior might be unhealthy in

and of itself came in a 2010 study published in Circulation. That study found

that even among those who exercised hard and regularly, the risk of death from

heart disease rose with the number of hours spent sitting in front of the TV. A

second study published the same year in the Journal of Epidemiology found an

increased risk of mortality that correlated with the number of hours spent

sitting. Once again, exercise didn t banish the increased risk of sedentary

behavior.

Studies since then have linked sitting time to increased risks of diabetes,

high cholesterol and high triglyceride levels.

The new study may go a long way to explaining the results of another recent

report that found that baby boomers are less healthy than their parents at the

same age. The older generation spent much more time walking to work and for

errands, Watson says, adding that she doesn t want folks to take this as a sign

that they should give up the gym.

That one hour of Zumba is great if it s all you can get, she says. But you

also want to walk everywhere you can.

Another option, one that TODAY anchor and certified personal trainer Jenna

Wolfe recommends to her clients, is to make the most of your down time.

Waiting for a subway? Do some calf raises. Waiting in line for something?

Balance on one leg and then switch. Sitting at your desk? Lift your feet off

the floor to engage your core, Wolfe says.

She encourages those she trains to try not to sit for more than one hour at a

time without getting up to walk around. My suggestion? Once an hour, drop 25

paper clips on the floor and squat down to pick each one up individually,

Wolfe says. For his part, Savelberg says that he hopes the new findings will

kick start couch potatoes into action or at least standing more and sitting

less.

He doesn t expect time-crunched people to walk for four hours every day. Simple

changes in lifestyle may do the trick, Savelberg says, adding you could take

your bike instead of your car, use the stairs and not the elevator, walk to

your colleague s office instead of sending her/him an email.

NBCNews.com health editor Melissa Dahl contributed to this report.