It’s irrefutable that exercise is good for your heart. Regular exercise will lower your heart rate and blood pressure and can reduce your risk of heart disease by 20-35 percent. The benefits are widely known and the evidence is strong. But is there a tipping point at which too much exercise becomes harmful to the heart? Could multiple and back-to-back endurance events actually increase your risk of cardiac conditions? This is a complicated and at times controversial topic but important to explore.
BASIC ANATOMY
First, let’s consider basic cardiac anatomy. The heart is made up of four chambers, two atria, and two ventricles. After the blood has circulated around the body, it returns through the veins into the right atrium, travels on to the right ventricle which then pumps it to the lungs. Here, the blood receives oxygen and flows on to the left atrium where it briefly lingers before being forcefully ejected by the thick, muscular left ventricle, to the rest of the body. The muscle making up the heart is a special kind of muscle called cardiac muscle and its contractions are controlled by a network of nerve pathways called the cardiac conduction system.
CARDIAC CHANGES WITH IMPROVED FITNESS
Increasing your fitness improves the effectiveness of the heart to pump oxygenated blood around the body. Like any muscle, cardiac muscle responds to an increased training load by strengthening itself during recovery. The muscular walls of the chambers contract with greater force, meaning that less-frequent heartbeats are required and resting heart rate falls. Larger volumes of blood are pumped with less effort. While blood pressure increases slightly during exercise itself, it falls when exercise stops and remains below its normal value for several hours. Regular exercise will reduce your heart rate, lower your blood pressure and improve your cardiovascular health.
Bu hikaye Outdoor Fitness dergisinin November 2019 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Outdoor Fitness dergisinin November 2019 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Get Confident In The Mountains
Taking a Mountain Leader course isn’t just for those who want to do it for a living – if you enjoy exploring the mountains, you’ll feel more confident and safer if you undertake this training.
15 Ways To Be A Better Runner
Whether you’re hoping to run faster, further or simply increase your motivation, Christina Neal has these top tips on how to improve your running
PUTTING THE TRAINING HOURS IN
Are your training goals ambitious? How can you find time to work out when you have a busy job and a family, yet want to train hard and long? Personal trainer Jeff Archer has some advice on finding the right balance
SECRETS OF THE 100 MARATHON CLUB
Just how do the members of this small but high ly prestigious club, some of whom have run over 500 marathons, race 26.2 miles or more, week in, week out? Lisa Jackson finds out
HIKING HOLIDAYS TO BOOST MENTAL HEALTH
While hiking is a wonderful way to get fit, it is also noted for its benefits for mental wellbeing.
‘I CLIMBED MY WAY OUT OF DEPRESSION'
Thomas Palmer was suffering from anxiety and felt unable to leave the house. Then, he was inspired to climb multiple mountains despite having no previous climbing experience. He tells Christina Neal how he turned his life around…
DON'T BE A FAIR-WEATHER CYCLIST
British pro cyclist Alex Dowsett, a six-time national time trial champion and former hour world record holder, reveals how to stay motivated to keep cycling in winter.
MICRO-RUNNING ADVENTURES
You don’t have to go on a grand expedition to have fun on the run – here are quirky ways to rev up your running mojo that will add a dash of excitement to your training.
DARK SKY ADVENTURES
locations are areas where the sky at night is unaffected by light pollution from big cities, enabling us to have a much clearer view of the stars Angela Youngman explains where they are and how to combine viewing them with outdoor exercise
BRAVING THE WATER IN WINTER
We often associate surfing with summer, but many UK surfers happily do it all year round. With the right kit and a little winter sun, it’s an invigorating and fun activity, says Ruth Pocock