Log In

Reset Password

Exercise may cut gallstone risk

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Exercise is good for mice and humans, but appears to be bad for gallstones, according to the findings of a study conducted with mice.

Dr. Kenneth R. Wilund and colleagues found that the overall gallstone weight was 2.5-fold greater in sedentary mice compared with mice that exercised. The researchers suggest that exercise may provide similar benefit to humans.

"The basic physiology of gallstone formation is pretty similar in humans and mice," Wilund told Reuters Health. Many of the proteins involved in the liver's cholesterol and bile acid metabolism are very similar, he said.

"So it is reasonable to suggest that the changes we believe were responsible for the reduction in gallstone formation in the exercise-trained mice could also occur in response to exercise training in humans," commented Wilund, of the University of Illinois, Urbana.

He and his colleagues fed 50 gallstone-susceptible mice standard chow that was supplemented to increase gallstone formation. They placed half the mice on a 12-week endurance exercise regimen that involved 45 minutes of running, five days a week. The remaining mice were sedentary for 12 weeks, the investigators report in the Journal of Applied Physiology. At the end of the study period, the animals were euthanised and the gallstones were removed. The total weight of the gallstones from the sedentary mice was 143 milligrams compared with 57 milligrams for exercising mice.