| Fitness
and Wellness
Benefits
Of Exercise
Longevity
and Aging:
Exercise,
even after age 50, can add healthy and active years to one's life.
Studies continue to show that it is never too late to start exercising
and that even small improvements in physical fitness can significantly
lower the risk of death. Simply walking regularly can prolong
life in the elderly. Moderately fit people, even if they smoke
or have high blood pressure, have a lower mortality rate than
the least fit.
Resistance
training is important for the elderly, because it is the only
form of exercise that can slow and even reverse the decline in
muscle mass, bone density, and strength. Adding workouts that
focus on speed and agility may be even more protective for older
people. Flexibility exercises help reduce the stiffness and loss
of balance that accompanies aging.
Cardiovascular
Health (Heart Disease and Stroke):
General
Guidelines. Inactivity is one of the four major risk factors for
heart disease, on par with smoking, unhealthy cholesterol, and
even high blood pressure. Like all muscles, the heart becomes
stronger and larger as a result of exercise so it can pump more
blood through the body with every beat. Exercise does not increase
the maximum heart rate, but a fit heart can pump more blood at
this maximum level and can sustain it longer with less strain.
The
resting heart rate of those who exercise is also slower, because
less effort is needed to pump blood. For preventing heart disease
frequency of exercises may be more important than duration. Exercise
even helps reverse some of the effects of smoking. Children should
be especially encouraged to exercise every day to prevent heart
disease later in life.
High
Blood Pressure:
Studies
indicate that regular exercise helps keep arteries elastic, even
in older people, which in turn keeps blood flowing and blood pressure
low. Sedentary people have a 35% greater risk of developing hypertension
than athletes do. No person with high blood pressure should start
an exercise program without consulting a physician. Studies have
shown that high-intensity exercise may not lower blood pressure
as effectively as moderate intensity exercise.
In
one study, for example, moderate exercise (jogging two miles a
day) controlled hypertension so well that more than half the patients
who had been taking drugs for high blood pressure were able to
discontinue their medication. Studies have indicated that T'ai
Chi, an ancient Chinese exercise involving slow, relaxing movements
may lower blood pressure almost as well as moderate-intensity
aerobic exercises. Before exercising, people with hypertension
should avoid caffeinated beverages, which increase heart rate,
the workload of the heart, and blood pressure during physical
activity.
Stroke:
The
benefits of exercise on stroke are uncertain. According to one
analysis, a group of 11,000 men, men who burned between 2,000
and 3,000 calories a week (about an hour of brisk walking five
days a week) cut their risk of stroke in half. Groups who burned
between 1,000 and 2,000 calories or more than 3,000 calories per
week also gained some protection against stroke but to a lesser
degree. In the same study, exercise that involved recreation was
more protective than exercise routines consisting simply of walking
or climbing.
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