Health Effects Of Exercise

Improved General Fitness
 
 
The greatest benefit of a regular exercise program is an improvement in overall fitness. As discussed above, appropriate exercise improves muscular strength and endurance, body composition, flexibility, and cardiorespiratory endurance. The level of maximal oxygen intake or cardiorespiratory endurance is not by itself of great importance to most individuals. What is important is that one's sustained energy-spending ability is directly related to maximal levels of performance. For example, consider the simple task of walking at a rate of three miles per hour. This task involves an energy expenditure of approximately three times the resting metabolic rate. Extremely unfit individuals may have a maximal aerobic power of only six times their resting metabolic rate. For such individuals, a three-mile-per-hour walk requires half of their maximal capacity. A middle-aged person who exercises regularly will have a maximal aerobic power 10 to 12 times resting, so the same walk will represent only 25 to 30 percent of maximal capacity. This example illustrates how any submaximal task is relatively much easier for the conditioned individual. Moreover, a person cannot work throughout the day at much more than about 20 percent of maximal capacity without becoming chronically fatigued. The deconditioned person who has a maximal aerobic power of six times resting can comfortably sustain a work level of only about 1.2 times resting throughout the day (6 × 0.20 = 1.2). This low capability for sustained energy expenditure can support only a very sedentary existence: for example, 20 hours of sleep and rest, two hours of personal care, one hour of housework and shopping, and one hour of activity at three times the resting rate each day.

The point of the preceding discussion is that the average energy-expenditure requirement of anyone's life can be calculated, and a person's maximal cardiorespiratory endurance determines how active a life-style can be sustained. Individuals who attempt to lead more active lives than their fitness level will support become chronically fatigued. Persons with adequate or optimal fitness levels, on the other hand, are able to meet the physical demands of an active life relatively easily. One of the most frequent observations made by individuals who have begun an exercise program is that they feel better, and research studies document an improvement in feelings of general well-being in more active people.

 

Decreased Risk Of Coronary Heart Disease

Coronary heart disease is the leading cause of death in the developed world. Coronary heart disease is defined as myocardial infarction, or heart attack; angina pectoris, or chest pain; or sudden death due to cardiac arrest or abnormal electrical activity in the heart. The basic disease process that underlies coronary heart disease is atherosclerosis, a disorder characterized by the accumulation of cholesterol and the proliferation of smooth muscle cells in the linings of the arteries. This results in a gradual narrowing of the arterial channel, and this narrowing diminishes and may ultimately stop blood flow through an artery. When this occurs in a coronary artery—that is, an artery supplying the heart—one of the manifestations of coronary heart disease occurs.

 

Epidemiological Evidence Of Exercise Benefits

 

Studies have linked sedentary living with high rates of coronary heart disease mortality. One study found that San Francisco longshoremen who worked in jobs requiring high levels of energy expenditure had less risk of dying of heart disease than did longshoremen who performed sedentary jobs. This study showed that dockworkers and cargo handlers expended at least 1,000 kilocalories more per day than did clerks and foremen and that sedentary workers, during a 22-year observation, were about twice as likely to die from heart disease. The higher risk of death in the less active men was not due to other coronary heart disease risk factors, such as smoking, obesity, and high blood pressure; nor was it the result of less healthy men's shifting to sedentary jobs.

Another study followed the health status of approximately 17,000 male graduates of Harvard University for many years. All these men essentially had sedentary jobs, but they differed in the amount of leisure time they spent on physical activities. Men who expended at least 2,000 kilocalories per week on physical activity had only half the death rate from heart disease as did those men who expended less than 500 kilocalories per week. Not all of this energy was spent in exercise programs; some was expended during routine activities such as climbing stairs.

 

 

The Effect of Exercise on Coronary-heart-disease risk factors

One of the important medical achievements of the 20th century has been the development of the risk-factor theory of coronary heart disease. Scientists have discovered that persons who are overweight, smoke cigarettes, have high blood pressure, or show elevated blood levels of certain types of fat- and cholesterol-carrying molecules are much likelier to die from coronary heart disease. Furthermore, combinations of these risk factors result in exponential increases in the risk of death. The discovery and description of risk factors have led to an understanding of the atherosclerotic process and of how to prevent and treat it. Evidence suggests that regular exercise can lower a person's exposure to several of the risk factors.

Fat and cholesterol are transported by the blood in complex molecules called lipoproteins. Researchers have identified several classes of lipoproteins and have elucidated their roles in atherosclerotic progression. It is, therefore, possible to describe abnormal, or high-risk, lipoprotein profiles. Diet and heredity are key factors determining a person's lipoprotein profile, and exercise also plays an important role. Regular aerobicexercise improves the lipoprotein profile in most individuals. Although more work is needed to completely understand this association, the dose of exercise necessary to effect a beneficial change in the lipoprotein profile seems to be about eight to 10 miles of running (or its equivalent in other activity) per week.

Elevated blood pressure (hypertension) is a second powerful risk factor for coronary heart disease. Sedentary living habits and low levels of physical fitness increase the risk of developing hypertension. Exercise also appears to lower blood pressure in at least some individuals with hypertension. The greatest benefit is probably for younger people (those less than 40 to 45 years of age) whose hypertension is of relatively recent onset.

Excess body weight is considered by most experts to be an independent risk factor for coronary heart disease, although obesity also indirectly increases the risk via deleterious impact on blood pressure and the lipoprotein profile. Exercise habits are strongly related to body weight. In virtually all studies of large populations, the more active individuals weigh less. One of the most consistent results seen in exercise-training studies is the loss of body weight and fat. Weight-loss programs that incorporate exercise as well as diet are more successful than those that rely on diet alone.

 
 
 
Impact on other chronic diseases

Although more research is needed to arrive at definitive conclusions, some evidence has suggested that regular exercise may help in the treatment or prevention of other chronic diseases. The control of type II diabetes, for example, appears to be aided by regular exercise. This form of diabetes is a major health problem in which the patient shows elevated levels of blood sugar despite having acceptable levels of insulin, the hormone that normally clears the blood of excess sugar by facilitating its utilization by the body cells. Persons with this disease need to control their blood sugar, but not with insulin injections. Oral medications that lower blood-sugar levels are available, but their usefulness has been questioned. Consequently, dietary modifications and exercise, both of which can lower blood-sugar levels, have become the key measures in controlling type II diabetes. Exercise seems to improve the insulin sensitivity of cells, so that blood sugar can more readily be taken in and used as fuel.

A few reports have linked low physical activity with a higher risk of developing certain cancers, particularly colon cancer. These results are intriguing, but more work is needed to firmly establish that sedentary habits are an independent risk factor for cancer.


 
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