If you thought it was too late to improve your heart health once you reach your 40s and 50s, think again, says Sarah Marinos
If you’ve spent a large part of your life on the couch nursing the TV remote, or if much of your working day involves sitting at a desk, all is not lost! Because it’s never too late to improve your health – at least when it comes to your heart.
New research has found even after years of sitting down, men and women in middle-age can reverse their risk of heart failure and perhaps add years to their life. The secret? Regular aerobic exercise – both moderate and high-intensity – on four or more days a week.
The risk of heart disease increases as we get older, particularly once we reach our 40s when the lifetime risk of coronary heart disease becomes one in two for men and one in three for women.
One risk factor for heart disease is inactivity and Heart Foundation statistics say almost two-thirds of Australians adults do “very little or no exercise at all”.
“Low fitness in middle age, in people right around the world, is a strong predictor of future risk of heart failure and is associated with increased cardiac stiffness, a potential precursor to heart failure,” explains Dr Erin Howden, a researcher at the Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute.
EXERCISE IS KEY
Latest research from the Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute has found there is a ‘sweet spot’ in mid-life when regular exercise can reverse some of the damage to the heart caused by years of sitting down and being inactive.
The study found mixing moderate physical activity with a weekly session of high-intensity interval training increased heart fitness. It also reduced damaging cardiac stiffness by 25 per cent.
Denne historien er fra April 2018-utgaven av Good Health Magazine Australia.
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Denne historien er fra April 2018-utgaven av Good Health Magazine Australia.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Unwind your MIND
DOES YOUR BRAIN SWITCH TO YOUR NEVER-ENDING TO-DO LIST WHEN YOU SIT DOWN TO RELAX? TRUDIE MCCONNOCHIE LOOKS AT WHY THIS HAPPENS AND HOW TO PREVENT IT
True Health
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To the point
ACUPUNCTURE HAS BEEN USED IN TRADITIONAL CHINESE MEDICINE FOR THOUSANDS OF YEARS. ERIN FISHER LOOKS AT HOW IT CAN BE USED TODAY AS A PATHWAY TO A HEALTHIER BODY AND MENSTRUAL CYCLE
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SINCE HER STRICTLY BALLROOM BREAKOUT ROLE TO PRIME-TIME TV PRESENTER, SONIA KRUGER HAS COME FULL CIRCLE. SHE TALKS TO PAUL EWART ABOUT DANCING AS MEDITATION, OVERCOMING ANXIETY AND BECOMING A MUMLATER IN LIFE
Gifts of gratitude
MONIQUE MCKENZIE EXPLAINS THAT OUR GRATITUDE TOWARDS OTHERS AFFECTS HOW WE SEE OUR LIVES, AND HAS SOME IDEAS TO SHOW THOSE WE KNOW, AND DON’T KNOW, OUR APPRECIATION
The Naked Chef Bares All
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Cocktails With A Twist
At Andrea Waters’ London-based bar, you can drink as many cocktails as you please without suffering the next day. She tells Erin Fisher about her vegan and alcohol-free establishment
Calm Within The Chaos
Our busy editor-in-chief Nicky Dewe travels to India and discovers how our mental, physical, and spiritual health are all connected