|
 |
 |

RESEARCH
General
Health
HEALTH
Scientists focusing
on how exercise raises immunity
Melissa
Mitchell, News Editor
(217) 333-5491; melissa@uiuc.edu
7/1/03
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — An increasing number of doctors and other health
experts have been encouraging older adults to rise from their recliners
and go for a walk, a bike ride, a swim, or engage in just about any
other form of physical activity as a defense against the potentially
harmful health consequences of a sedentary lifestyle.
"Exercise is touted as a panacea for older adults," said Jeffrey
Woods, a kinesiology professor
at the University of Illinois, who noted that fitness programs are routinely
recommended for people with various health problems – from diabetes
to heart disease. Health experts generally recognize that this population
benefits from physical fitness, he said. What they don’t know
is why exercise appears to have certain preventive and restorative health
effects. Also unknown is what – if any – relationship exists
between exercise and immune functioning.
"Despite the numerous benefits of exercise – for example,
improving cardiovascular and muscular fitness – we know very little
about how exercise affects the immune systems of older adults,"
Woods said. "Good, bad or indifferent, this information could have
important public health consequences for our aging population."
For that reason, Woods and colleagues in the university’s kinesiology
department are conducting research that seeks to establish the link
between exercise training and immune function. The field, he said, is
still in its infancy, with Illinois researchers among those who are
defining it.
"Our laboratory is using both animal and human models to address
the extent to which exercise affects immune functioning and susceptibility
to infectious disease in older populations," Woods said. "We
have obtained some exciting preliminary data in mice that suggest that
moderate exercise or training may boost some immune function measures
and reduce mortality caused by influenza. While we don’t have
corollary evidence yet in people, we are in the midst of conducting
a large clinical exercise trial in older adults, funded by the National
Institute on Aging, that will provide definitive evidence as to whether
moderate exercise training influences immune function."
In the meantime, results of one study conducted in Woods’ lab,
published in the current online edition of the journal Brain, Behavior
and Immunity, indicates that exercise training increases the ratio of
naïve T cells to memory T cells in the spleens of older mice. The
finding is potentially significant, he said, because, on this measure,
"we turn old mice into young mice." When people and animals
age, he explained, the thymus, which produces naïve T lymphocytes,
shrinks, thus producing fewer naïve cells. "This is one reason
that older people/animals have trouble responding to new environmental
pathogens."
And with the recent
appearance of so many new environmental pathogens – from West
Nile Virus to SARS and monkeypox – Woods said the ability to boost
the immune systems of the elderly, who are among the populations most
at risk from infection, is a worthy goal.
|
 |
 |
|