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Published 17:10 11 Apr 2019 BST
Updated 17:23 11 Apr 2019 BST
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However, this new study discovered that if you lift weights, you have a 25% reduced risk of cancer, specifically colon cancer.
One school of thought previously assumed that strength training could actually increase your chances of contracting the big C - but this is extremely wide of the mark.
Lifting weights causes muscle protein synthesis - muscle gain, in other words. This occurs via a process called mTOR activation.
Those who believed there were dangers here claimed that because cancer was caused by a form of mTOR activation, then strength training must be bad.
It isn't.
This process is specific to the type of cell it affects. If you lift weights, the muscle cells grow and proliferate. Cancer cells growing and proliferating is an entirely different process that has nothing to do with lifting weights.
Diet is also a huge factor. If you regularly lift weights, you are most likely on a high protein diet. This kind of diet is associated with a reduced risk of cancer, particularly kidney cancer.

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