While promoting regular exercise, the statement published in
Circulation warns against extreme endurance sports and against couch
potatoes trying to get fit too quickly.
"In many respects exercise is like medicine," said lead author Barry
A. Franklin, director of preventive cardiology and cardiac
rehabilitation at Beaumont Health in Royal Oak, Michigan. "Like
medicines, exercise comes with indications and contraindications.
And overdosing and under-dosing are both possible."
For most Americans, the issue is under-dosing, Franklin said.
But there are also issues with overdosing on exercise. Studies in
ultra-endurance athletes show extreme exercise can result in
scarring of heart muscle, irregular heart rhythms and build-up of
coronary calcium, which can contribute to atherosclerosis, Franklin
said.
"More and more people are engaging in extreme exercise because they
think if some exercise is good, more is better," he said. "That is
not necessarily the case."
It's not just endurance athletes who risk damaging their hearts.
"The biggest risk is with people who have been inactive for years,
such as the person who may have been a track athlete 40 years
earlier and wants to start up again, running around the block,"
Franklin said. "A major take home message is that anybody middle
aged or older should start with a walking program and should not
start with running. But most can start a walking program without a
stress test."
Start slowly, in the range of 2 to 3 miles per hour, Franklin said.
"Then you can move up to 3.5 to 4 mph and if you're on a treadmill
you can increase the grade, provided you experience no symptoms," he
said. "But, if you develop pain or discomfort anywhere from the
belly on up, it could be (a sign of angina) related to a blockage of
one or more arteries."
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After reviewing more than 300 studies, Franklin's team concluded that physically
active people, such as regular walkers, had a 50% lower risk of heart attack and
cardiac arrest. On the other hand, they found, while the risk of heart attack
and cardiac arrest was low overall among participants in marathons and
triathlons, it rises over time.
The important message is that regular exercise, that is, 30 minutes a day five
days a week, is beneficial, said Dr. Annapoorna Kini, director of the cardiac
catheterization lab at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City, who wasn't
involved in the scientific statement.
Kini advises people who are thinking about exercising to choose something
they'll enjoy, whether it's biking, working out on a treadmill, dancing or Zumba.
"It's got to be something you look forward to," she said. "And you have to put
some effort into weight training as you get older. After age 40 you start losing
muscle mass."
Kerry Stewart, who studies exercise physiology at Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine in Baltimore, said there's a point beyond which health
benefits don't continue to increase with increasing time spent exercising.
In fact, benefits begin to decline past a certain point, said Stewart, who
wasn't involved in the statement.
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/393Zklv Circulation, online February 26, 2020.
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