|
Exercise and Your Heart:
A Guide to Physical Activity
- Do we get enough exercise
from our daily activities?
Most Americans get little vigorous
exercise at work or during leisure hours. Today, only a few jobs require
vigorous physical activity. People usually ride in cars or buses and watch TV
during their free time rather than be physically active. Activities like
golfing and bowling provide people with some benefit. But they do not provide
the same benefits as regular, more vigorous exercise.
Evidence suggests that even low- to
moderate-intensity activities can have both short- and long-term benefits. If
done daily, they help lower your risk of heart disease. Such activities
include pleasure walking, stair climbing, gardening, yardwork, moderate to
heavy housework, dancing and home exercise. More vigorous exercise can help
improve fitness of the heart and lungs, which can provide even more consistent
benefits for lowering heart disease risk.
Today, many people are rediscovering the
benefits of regular, vigorous exercise - activities like swimming, brisk
walking, running, or jumping rope. These kinds of activities are sometimes
called "aerobic" - meaning the body uses oxygen to produce the
energy needed for the activity. Aerobic exercises can condition your heart and
lungs if performed at the proper intensity for at least 30 minutes, 3-4 times
a week.
But you don't have to train like a
marathon runner to become more physically fit! Any activity that gets you
moving around, even it it's done for just a few minutes each day, is better
than none at all. For inactive people, the trick is to get started. One great
way is to take a walk for 10-15 minutes during your lunch break. Other ideas
in this pamphlet will help you get moving and living a more active life.
What are the benefits of
regular physical activity?
These are the benefits often experienced
by people who get regular physical activity.
Feeling better
Regular physical activity -
- gives you more energy
- helps in coping with stress
- improves your self-image
- increases resistance to fatigue
- helps counter anxiety and depression
- helps you to relax and feel less
tense
- improves the ability to fall asleep
quickly and sleep well
- provides an easy way to share an
activity with friends or family and an opportunity to meet new friends
Looking better
Regular physical activity
- tones your muscles
- burns off calories to help lose extra
pounds or helps you stay at your desirable weight
- helps control your appetite
You need to burn off 3,500 calories more
than you take in to lose 1 pound. If you want to lose weight, regular physical
activity can help you in either of two ways.
First, you can eat your usual amount of
calories, but be more active. For example: A 200-pound person who keeps on
eating the same amount of calories, but decides to walk briskly each day for 1
1/2 miles will lose about 14 pounds in 1 year. Or second, you can eat fewer
calories and be more active. This is an even better way to lose weight.
About three-fourths of the energy you
burn every day comes from what your body uses for its basic needs, such as
sleeping, breathing, digesting food and reclining. A person burns up only a
small amount of calories with daily activities such as sitting. Any physical
activity in addition to what you normally do will burn up extra calories.
The average calories spent per hour by a
150-pound person are listed below. (A lighter person burns fewer calories; a
heavier person burns more.) Since exact calorie figures are not available for
most activities, the figures below are averaged from several sources and show
the relative vigor of the activities.
| Activity |
Calories
burned |
| Bicycling 6 mph |
240
cals./hr. |
| Bicycling 12 mph |
410
cals./hr. |
| Cross-country skiing |
700
cals./hr. |
| Jogging 5 1/2mph |
740
cals./hr. |
| Jogging 7 mph |
920
cals./hr. |
| Jumping rope |
750
cals./hr. |
| Running in place |
650
cals./hr. |
| Running 10 mph |
1280
cals./hr. |
| Swimming 25 yds/min. |
275
cals./hr. |
| Swimming 50 yds/min. |
500
cats./hr. |
| Tennis-singles |
400
cals./hr. |
| Walking 2 mph |
240
cals./hr. |
| Walking 3 mph |
320
cals./hr. |
| Walking 41/2
mph |
440
cals./hr. |
The calories spent in a particular
activity vary in proportion to one's body weight. For example, a 1 00-pound
person burns 1/3 fewer calories, so you would multiply the number of
calories by 0.7. For a 200-pound person, multiply by 1.3.
Working harder or faster for a given
activity will only slightly increase the calories spent. A better way to
burn up more calories is to increase the time spent on your activity.
Working better
Regular physical activity -
- helps you to be more productive at
work
- increases your capacity for
physical work
- builds stamina for other physical
activities
- increases muscle strength
- helps your heart and lungs work
more efficiently
Consider the benefits of a
well-conditioned heart:
In 1 minute with 45 to 50 beats, the
heart of a well-conditioned person pumps the same amount of blood as an
inactive person's heart pumps in 70 to 75 beats. Compared to the
well-conditioned heart, the average heart pumps up to 36,000 more times per
day, 13 million more times per year.
Feeling, looking, and working better -
all these benefits from regular physical activity can help you enjoy your
life more fully.
National Heart, Blood, and Lung
Institute Path:
Home>Education>Fitness
and Physical Activity Information>Exercise
and Your Heart: Do We Get Enough Exercise From Our Daily Activities?
|