Puffing through a park or panting along a highway, joggers are unquestionably helping their hearts. But are they shedding poundage as well? No, say three U.S. Air Force researchers in the A.M.A. Journal: exercise alone can't do it. A runner of medium weight who wishes to shed a pound of fat on a one-shot basis must expend 3,500 calories, which means that he must run for well over an hour.
Still, say the doctors, exercise is an important element of any weight-control program. The trio figured the actual caloric consumption for men of various weights running a jogger's common distance of 1.5 miles in times ranging from eight to 16 minutes. They found that a 170-lb. man who can cover this distance in eight minutes burns 175 calories. This may not seem like much, but the Air Force physicians note that a runner who does this regularly can lose ten pounds a yearif he does not increase his caloric intake. In fact, if a runner on a 2,600-calorie-per-day diet can burn off 200 calories a day, he can treat himself to a small piece of cake every night and still keep his weight constant.
> Large numbers of Westerners have come to accept the idea that acupuncture can help alleviate pain. But doctors have expressed doubts about another claim advanced for the ancient Oriental art: needle wielding can relieve nerve deafness, a hearing loss caused by damage to the cranial nerve that serves the ear. Their skepticism has been bolstered by two new reports.
A team of Michigan State University researchers states in the A.M.A.'s Archives of Otolaryngology (a journal for ear, nose and throat specialists) that it observed an acupuncturist with 15 years of experience administer eight treatments to a deaf World War II veteran. Testing the man's hearing before, during and after the treatments, the researchers could discern no measurable improvement.
The other reportto the American Laryngology, Rhinology and Otology Societywas presented by Dr. Samuel Rosen, a New York City otologist who learned acupuncture three years ago as one of the first American physicians to visit Communist China. Rosen studied 40 children who received acupuncture therapy for their hearing disorders and found that only two showed improvement, and that was slight.
> Doctors have long been puzzled about the cause of primary dyslexia, a common learning disorder that afflicts between 2% and 5% of all U.S. schoolchildren with average or superior intelligence, and interferes with their ability to read. Most researchers assume that the root of the problem is in the cortex, site of the brain centers involved with thinking and learning. But two New York City doctors offer a different explanationone that could lead to earlier diagnosis of this disorder.
