'Immune' to Exercise

“I don’t exercise, not because I am a lazy bastard, but because I am immune”
I wonder where we will first hear this…

Public-health campaigns regularly plug exercise as a sure-fire way to avoid an early grave. But that message may be too simplistic. For an unhappy few, even quite strenuous exercise may have no effect on their fitness or their risk of developing diseases like diabetes.

“There is astounding variation in the response to exercise. The vast majority will benefit in some way, but there will be a minority who will not benefit at all,” says Claude Bouchard of Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, US.

At the Australian Health and Medical Research Congress in Sydney, Australia, last week Bouchard reported the results of a study assessing the role of genes in fitness and health changes in response to exercise.

In the study, 742 people from 213 families were put through a strict 20-week endurance training programme. The volunteers had not taken regular physical activity for the previous six months. Exercise on stationary bikes was gradually increased so that by the last six weeks the volunteers were exercising for 50 minutes three times a week at 75% of the maximum output they were capable of before the study.

Previous reports indicated that there are huge variations in “trainability” between subjects. For example, the team found that training improved maximum oxygen consumption, a measure of a person?s ability to perform work, by 17% on average.

But the most trainable volunteers gained over 40%, and the least trainable showed no improvement at all. Similar patterns were seen with cardiac output, blood pressure, heart rate and other markers of fitness.

Slogging away

Bouchard reported that the impact of training on insulin sensitivity ? a marker of risk for diabetes and heart disease ? also varied. It improved in 58% of the volunteers following exercise, but in 42% it showed no improvement or, in a few cases, may have got worse.

“It’s negative, but it’s true. Some people slog away and don’t get any improvement,” says Kathryn North of the Institute of Neuromuscular Research at the Children’s Hospital at Westmead in Sydney, Australia.

In the eight volunteers who showed the largest improvement in insulin sensitivity, 51 genes were expressed in muscles at double the levels of the eight people who showed the least improvement, and 74 genes were expressed at half the level. Many of these genes were a surprise to the researchers because they have not previously been linked to exercise.

“We need to recognise that although on average exercise may have clear benefits, it may not work for everyone,” says Mark Hargreaves of Deakin University in Melbourne, Australia. “Some people may do better to change their diet.”

It doesn’t look like they looked at diet at all. The people who did not gain anything were probably overweight who kept on eating the burgers, coke and ice-cream (they probably increased their food intake becuse they were tired from exercise).
Note also that they did 50 mins of very low cardio, reaching a plateau of 75% of original maximum.
Hell, when I started exercising my max was so small as to be embarassing. Within 4 weeks, my 100% original maximum was way too easy.

Crap study.
Crap conclusion (not that they were looking at the benefits of exercise, only the role of genes in exercise).

This will probably turn into a cult, with books like “It’s not my fault I’m fat”, and “Exercise is pointless”, followed by a ‘revolutionary new exercise pill which will boost the effectiveness of exercise’ for those fatties who think 5 minutes on an ab-doer once a week should be enough to see the weight fly off.

yeah,and considering all they did was endurance training…what about those with predominately fast-twitch muscle fibers? they’re not gonna see much for results on that…

but seriously, i AM immune to exercise.

[quote]De Molay wrote:
Note also that they did 50 mins of very low cardio, reaching a plateau of 75% of original maximum.
[/quote]

Precisely. They were probably getting a similarly “intense” workout while asleep.

I love the conclusion:

“Some people may do better to change their diet.”

Wow - what a revelation!