Suppr超能文献

向现代慢性病宣战:通过运动生物学进行一级预防。

Waging war on modern chronic diseases: primary prevention through exercise biology.

作者信息

Booth F W, Gordon S E, Carlson C J, Hamilton M T

机构信息

Department of Integrative Biology, University of Texas Medical School, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.

出版信息

J Appl Physiol (1985). 2000 Feb;88(2):774-87. doi: 10.1152/jappl.2000.88.2.774.

Abstract

In this review, we develop a blueprint for exercise biology research in the new millennium. The first part of our plan provides statistics to support the contention that there has been an epidemic emergence of modern chronic diseases in the latter part of the 20th century. The health care costs of these conditions were almost two-thirds of a trillion dollars and affected 90 million Americans in 1990. We estimate that these costs are now approaching $1 trillion and stand to further dramatically increase as the baby boom generation ages. We discuss the reaction of the biomedical establishment to this epidemic, which has primarily been to apply modern technologies to stabilize overt clinical problems (e.g., secondary and tertiary prevention). Because this approach has been largely unsuccessful in reversing the epidemic, we argue that more emphasis must be placed on novel approaches such as primary prevention, which requires attacking the environmental roots of these conditions. In this respect, a strong association exists between the increase in physical inactivity and the emergence of modern chronic diseases in 20th century industrialized societies. Approximately 250,000 deaths per year in the United States are premature due to physical inactivity. Epidemiological data have established that physical inactivity increases the incidence of at least 17 unhealthy conditions, almost all of which are chronic diseases or considered risk factors for chronic diseases. Therefore, as part of this review, we present the concept that the human genome evolved within an environment of high physical activity. Accordingly, we propose that exercise biologists do not study "the effect of physical activity" but in reality study the effect of reintroducing exercise into an unhealthy sedentary population that is genetically programmed to expect physical activity. On the basis of healthy gene function, exercise research should thus be viewed from a nontraditional perspective in that the "control" group should actually be taken from a physically active population and not from a sedentary population with its predisposition to modern chronic diseases. We provide exciting examples of exercise biology research that is elucidating the underlying mechanisms by which physical inactivity may predispose individuals to chronic disease conditions, such as mechanisms contributing to insulin resistance and decreased skeletal muscle lipoprotein lipase activity. Some findings have been surprising and remarkable in that novel signaling mechanisms have been discovered that vary with the type and level of physical activity/inactivity at multiple levels of gene expression. Because this area of research is underfunded despite its high impact, the final part of our blueprint for the next millennium calls for the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to establish a major initiative devoted to the study of the biology of the primary prevention of modern chronic diseases. We justify this in several ways, including the following estimate: if the percentage of all US morbidity and mortality statistics attributed to the combination of physical inactivity and inappropriate diet were applied as a percentage of the NIH's total operating budget, the resulting funds would equal the budgets of two full institutes at the NIH! Furthermore, the fiscal support of studies elucidating the scientific foundation(s) targeted by primary prevention strategies in other public health efforts has resulted in an increased efficacy of the overall prevention effort. We estimate that physical inactivity impacts 80-90% of the 24 integrated review group (IRG) topics proposed by the NIH's Panel on Scientific Boundaries for Review, which is currently directing a major restructuring of the NIH's scientific funding system. Unfortunately, the primary prevention of chronic disease and the investigation of physical activity/inactivity and/or exercise are not mentioned in the almost 200 total subtopics comprising t

摘要

在本综述中,我们为新千年的运动生物学研究制定了一个蓝图。我们计划的第一部分提供了统计数据,以支持这样一种观点,即现代慢性病在20世纪后期呈流行态势出现。1990年,这些疾病的医疗保健费用几乎达到了两万亿美元的三分之二,影响了9000万美国人。我们估计,现在这些费用已接近1万亿美元,而且随着婴儿潮一代步入老年,费用还会大幅进一步增加。我们讨论了生物医学机构对这种流行态势的反应,主要是应用现代技术来稳定明显的临床问题(如二级和三级预防)。由于这种方法在扭转这种流行态势方面基本上没有成功,我们认为必须更加重视诸如一级预防这样的新方法,这需要从根源上解决这些疾病的环境因素。在这方面,身体活动不足的增加与20世纪工业化社会中现代慢性病的出现之间存在着紧密的联系。在美国,每年约有25万人因身体活动不足而过早死亡。流行病学数据表明,身体活动不足会增加至少17种不健康状况的发生率,几乎所有这些状况都是慢性病或被视为慢性病的风险因素。因此,作为本综述的一部分,我们提出这样一个概念,即人类基因组是在高身体活动的环境中进化的。相应地,我们建议运动生物学家实际上并非研究“身体活动的影响”,而是研究将运动重新引入一个久坐不动且不健康的人群所产生的影响,这个人群的基因决定了他们原本就应进行身体活动。基于健康的基因功能,运动研究应从一个非传统的视角来看待,即“对照组”实际上应取自身体活跃的人群,而不是有患现代慢性病倾向的久坐人群。我们提供了一些令人兴奋的运动生物学研究实例,这些研究正在阐明身体活动不足可能使个体易患慢性病的潜在机制,比如导致胰岛素抵抗和骨骼肌脂蛋白脂肪酶活性降低的机制。一些发现令人惊讶且意义重大,因为发现了新的信号传导机制,这些机制在基因表达的多个层面上会因身体活动/不活动的类型和程度而有所不同。尽管这一研究领域影响重大但资金不足,我们为下一个千年制定的蓝图的最后一部分呼吁美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)发起一项重大倡议,致力于研究现代慢性病一级预防的生物学机制。我们从几个方面为此进行了论证,包括以下估算:如果将美国所有发病率和死亡率统计数据中归因于身体活动不足和不合理饮食综合作用的百分比应用于NIH的总运营预算,所得资金将相当于NIH两个完整研究所的预算!此外,对阐明其他公共卫生工作中一级预防策略所针对的科学基础的研究提供财政支持,已提高了整体预防工作的成效。我们估计,身体活动不足影响了NIH科学审查边界小组提议的24个综合审查组(IRG)主题中的80 - 90%,该小组目前正在指导NIH科学资助体系的重大重组。不幸的是,在总共近200个细分主题中,几乎没有提及慢性病的一级预防以及身体活动/不活动和/或运动的研究。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验