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Benefits of Exercise for the Prostate
May 1, 2007
More benefits of exercise in
men, for the prostate and sexuality, reports
the Harvard Men’s Health Watch
BOSTON — Protection against
heart disease, stroke, diabetes, obesity, hypertension,
memory loss, colon cancer, fractures, and depression
should be enough to get men exercising. But those
who need extra motivation should consider the added
benefits to their prostates and sexuality,
reports the May 2007 issue of Harvard Men’s
Health Watch.
A 2006 study from Sweden reported that regular exercise
is associated with a reduced risk of moderate and severe
symptoms of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). After
taking other risk factors into account, the most active
men were 28% less likely to have substantial lower
urinary tract symptoms than the least active men. The Harvard
Men’s Health Watch notes that the effect
of exercise on prostate cancer is less clear. Some
studies suggest that exercise can reduce risk, while
others do not.
Erectile Dysfunction Help
Although erectile dysfunction is not life-threatening,
it can surely impair quality of life. A Harvard study
linked regular
exercise to a 41% reduction in the risk of erectile
dysfunction — all it took was about 30 minutes
of walking a day. And in 2004, a randomized clinical
trial reported that moderate exercise (averaging less
than 28 minutes a day) can help restore sexual performance
in obese, middle-aged men with erectile dysfunction.
Also in this issue:
Related
Information

Harvard Men's Health Watch is available
from Harvard Health Publications, the publishing division
of the Harvard Medical School. You can subscribe at www.health.harvard.edu/men or
by calling 1-877-649-9457 toll-free.
About Harvard Health Publications
Harvard Health
Publications publishes five monthly newsletters—Harvard
Health Letter, Harvard
Women's Health Watch, Harvard
Men's Health Watch, Harvard
Mental Health Letter, and Harvard
Heart Letter—as well as more than 50 special health
reports and books drawing on the expertise of the 8,000
faculty physicians at Harvard Medical School and its
world-famous affiliated hospitals. For more information
about Harvard Medical School publications, please visit
our Web site, www.health.harvard.edu.
Source: Harvard
Health Publications
Contact: hhpmedia@hms.harvard.edu
Web site: http://www.health.harvard.edu |
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