Sunday, February 5, 2012

Study finds tai chi reduces bone loss in breast cancer survivors.

December 8, 2010 by David Bendall · Leave a Comment 

Treatments for breast cancer can accelerate bone loss leading to osteoporosis and an increased risk of fracture. Researchers at Rochester Medical Center carried out a pilot study to investigate if tai chi could reduce bone loss compared to standard exercise support therapy. The researchers found that biomarkers of bone formation increased more in the tai [...]

Tai chi beneficial for older women with osteopaenia.

August 14, 2010 by David Bendall · Leave a Comment 

A randomized trial carried out by researchers at Texas Tech University found that 24 weeks of tai chi improved general health, vitality, and stride width while decreasing pain compared to a control group. The study involved randomly dividing 61 females aged 65 plus with low bone mass into two groups. The first group practiced tai [...]

Study compares the effects of tai chi and resistance exercises on bone health, muscle strength and balance among seniors.

December 27, 2009 by David Bendall · Leave a Comment 

Researchers at the Chinese University of Hong Kong studied the effects of tai chi and resistance training on bone health, muscle strength and balance among seniors aged 65-74. 90 men and 90 women were randomly assigned to either a tai chi group, resistance training group or non-exercising control group. The tai chi and resistance training [...]

Pilot study compares the effect of tai chi and resistance training on bone metabolism in the elderly.

December 25, 2009 by David Bendall · Leave a Comment 

Researchers at Texas Tech in Lubbock Texas carried out a pilot study designed to compare the effects of tai chi to resistance training on bone metabolism. Twenty eight sedentary elderly adults were randomly assigned to 24 weeks of either tai chi or resistance training. Both groups participated in three 45 minute exercise sessions per week. [...]

Tai chi beneficial for retarding bone loss in weight-bearing bones in postmenopausal women.

December 20, 2009 by David Bendall · Leave a Comment 

Researchers at the Chinese University of Hong Kong randomly assigned 132 healthy early postmenopausal women to either 12 months of 45 minutes per day, 5 days per week supervised tai chi or no additional exercise. The rate of bone loss was less in the tai chi group than in the control group with the reduction [...]

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