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Weightlifting for Heart Health
Conventional wisdom has been that the
best exercise to improve heart health and maintain a
healthy cardiovascular sytem and thereby reducing the
risk of stroke and heart attack were aerobic or so called
cardio workouts. Weight lifting has traditionally been
considered an anaerobic exercise, and as such was not
thought to be the best choice for heart health. However
that is no longer the thinking. Many medical professionals
and personal trainers recognize the benefits weightlifting
has on the heart and lungs, especially when combined
with more traditional cardio workouts.
While up until recently cardiologists
actually discouraged their patients from weight training
and weightlifting, that view is changing. The American
Heart Association published recent evidence that shows
the benefits to the heart of working out with weights.
The reversal of opinion is not only because physiologists
now recognize that there is indeed an aerobic component
to weightlifting exercises, but because of the overall
improvement in condition and body changes that weightlifting
and building muscle create. It has been found that increasing
muscle mass and strength actually lowers Resting Metabolism,
and resting blood pressure.
While the benefits of building muscle
to the body's most important muscle, the heart - are
becoming readily apparent for any healthy person - for
the heart patient weightlifting and resistance training
can be very important to preventing future heart attacks
or other cardiac episodes. It is all about being in
better condition and being stronger. It's not brain
surgery but it is basic heart science. If you have a
weak heart even simple tasks like walking up stairs
lifting groceries, even walking can put a strain on
it. If you are stronger from building lean muscle mass
these tasks become that much simpler, your heart doesn't
have to work so hard. Studies have also shown that when
people lifting weight were monitored for cardiac output
the heart pumped stronger and faster. Like any muscle
this builds stronger walls in the ventricle, the pumping
part of the heart. Strong ventricles mean the heart
can pump more efficiently, and effectively lowers resting
heart rate, which can lower blood pressure, one of the
main contributing factors to heart attack and stroke.
And of course gaining a healthy heart
is not the only benefit of weightlifting. Most people
who have heart problems are also overweight or struggling
with some of the other problems of obesity like diabetes.
Weightlifting is a great way to lose weight and keep
it off by raising your metabolism and making your body
burn calories more efficiently. While minute for minute
anaerobic exercises like weightlifting will not burn
as much as an aerobic exercise like biking or jogging,
in other words15 minute on a stationary bike initially
burn far more calories then 15 minutes of weightlifting.
However its been found that up to two hours after a
15 minute weightlifting workout, the body continues
to burn calories as the muscles remain in an agitated
state. The American Heart Association now recommends
a 30 minute aerobic workout 6 times a week, and adding
a weightlifting session of at least 15 minutes 3 times
a week.
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