Since 1996 WHN is the second oldest medical website on the net, second only to the American Medical Association, servicing over 35,000 physicians and scientists worldwide.

Non-Profit Trusted Source of Non-Commercial Health Information

Resistance Training Protects Against Heart Disease

Weight training helps to promote proper functioning of high-density lipoprotein (HDL; “good” cholesterol), among young men

Exercise has the potential to protect against heart disease in a variety of ways. Christian K. Roberts, from the University of California/Los Angeles (UCLA; California, USA), and colleagues assessed the molecular behavior of high-density lipoprotein (HDL; “good” cholesterol), in young men who weight trained regularly, as compared to sedentary counterparts. The researchers found that the men who didn’t exercise were more likely than those who weight trained to have dysfunctional HDL. Having faulty HDL was associated with numerous other risk factors for heart disease, including high triglycerides and a higher trunk fat mass. This finding held true regardless of the men’s weight, which suggests that maintaining a “healthy” weight isn’t as important for healthy cholesterol function as being active by regularly performing strength training. Observing that: “Chronic [resistance training] is associated with improved HDL redox activity,” the study authors submit that: “This may contribute to the beneficial effects of [resistance training] on reducing cardiovascular disease risk, irrespective of body weight status.”

Christian K. Roberts, Michael Katiraie, Daniel M. Croymans, Otto O. Yang, Theodoros Kelesidis. “Untrained young men have dysfunctional HDL compared with strength-trained men irrespective of body weight status.” J Appl Physiol October 1, 2013; 115:1043-1049.