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/ Health News / 2007 / October 2007 / October 2, 2007 Excessive exercise may be detrimental to health |
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Almost 25 pct of people, who are on a gym regimen, exercise at levels that can be detrimental to their health, a new study has revealed.
Melbourne, Oct 2 : Almost 25 pct of people, who are on a gym regimen, exercise at levels that can be detrimental to their health, a new study has revealed.
The study that looked into the exercise patterns of gym-goers in a fitness centre in Melbourne found that 23 pct of them, exercising between six and 20 hours a week, are largely reliant on their physical fix.
The group called excessive exercisers undertook vigorous exercise for longer hours compared to their non-excessive counterparts.
Jane Fletcher, a psychologist and co-author of the study, said that people took to excessive exercise mostly when they were sick or injured.
"Exercise is not bad in itself. It is whether it interferes with your work, social life and family life that may indicate whether you have a problem," the age.com. au quoted Fletcher, as saying.
"Some of the worst cases were of people being sick off work and still going to the gym or those insisting on exercise in 40-degree heat. It's more than just the number of hours they exercise each week. It's about ... the reasons behind why they might be exercising," she added.
Excessive-exercise can cause repetitive-use injuries and chronic infections triggered by lower immunity.
Overdoing can lead to stopped periods and osteoporosis in women.
The executive director of the Eating Disorders Foundation of NSW, Amanda Jordan, said that over-dependence on exercise is most often the first sign of an eating disorder.
"It can begin as something which is quite moderate and contributing to fitness and then you start getting into real strife because people do not know when to stop," Jordan said.
ANI