Sitting carries its own risks, it is well known. And now scientists are hoping to offer acceptable guidelines on how long one could sit without inviting health problems.

"Certainly the irony of having everyone sit through a conference on the perils of sitting was not lost on us," said Anne Friedlander, a consulting professor of human biology at Stanford and an organizer of the two-day conference entitled The Science of Sedentary Behavior.
"The act of sitting may in and of itself creates health problems, sitting for long periods of time," says Ken Smith from the Stanford Center on Longevity.
"When you sit down, you unload many of your muscle groups. There is in fact, animal data that says that some of the muscles themselves, lose a significant ability to metabolize fat," says Smith told ABC7.
An average person sits for about seven hours a day, but once the number goes higher, to eight or nine hours a day of sitting, those people had more health problems.
"Sitting we know, it leads to risk factors for diabetes, they're the same risk factors for heart disease and they're also related to the likelihood of developing breast or colon cancer," says Neville Owen, Ph.D., from the Ph.D.,University of Queensland.
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"We know there are links between too much sitting and risks to health," said David Dunstan, an associate professor at the Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute in Melbourne, Australia. "But we have yet to figure out the exact causes and to what effect."
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Marc Hamilton, a professor of inactivity physiology at the Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge, La., said the science needs to get to the point where policymakers can issue guidelines that will help people make healthful choices.
He drew a comparison to research on sun burns.
"How much sun exposure is too much? No one really knows, but we've gotten to a point where we can say confidently that we should limit our time in the sun," Hamilton told AP.
Source-Medindia