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Exercise: As Treatment To Manage Blood Pressure



Exercise: As Treatment To Manage Blood Pressure

Many studies involving different age groups and differing exercise have shown that regular physical activity lowers blood pressure for those who have hypertension. A review of over 20 physical activity and blood pressure studies showed that, systolic blood pressure is lowered about 11 mm Hg and diastolic blood pressure is reduced an average of 8 mm Hg with regular exercise. Those effects have been documented for men, women, and children and can occur after just a few weeks of training.

Lowering blood pressure 8 to 11 mm Hg is similar to the changes found after treatment with a typical blood pressure-lowering medication. Reducing blood pressure to this degree can reduce stroke and heart attack rates by 25 percent! So, exercise can be the difference between being placed on drugs, with all their possible side effects and cost, and not needing any other treatment. For others, exercise can eliminate the need for one or more blood pressure control, exercise helps you feel better, decreases other risks for heart and blood vessel disease, lowers body fat, and improves your fitness level. On the other hand, blood pressure medicines do none of those. And remember, the best they can do is not make you feel worse.

  1. Kinds of Exercise That Lower Blood Pressure

Nearly all exercises lower blood pressure. Endurance exercise such as walking, jogging, swimming. stair climbing, and bike riding can help control blood pressure. Even weight lifting can be used to treat hyper-tension. Practically any physical exercise you can think of can be used to lower your blood pressure. However, to be effective and to improve your chance of success, you should select exercises you enjoy and that are convenient. To get some motivational tips, click here.

  1. How Exercises Lower Blood Pressure

Exercise appears to reduce blood pressure in several different ways.

First, just taking off fat through physical activity will lower blood pressure; this is similar to reducing body fat by dieting. But exercise has several advantages over just dieting. Breathing more rapidly, even with low levels of exercise, and sweating during physical activity help you get rid of water and salt, as would using a diuretic to lower blood pressure.

Also, exercise affects two major hormones in our body. With training, the resting level of adrenaline is reduced. This lowers your heart rate and blood pressure, just as if you used a beta blocker, but with several major differences. Using beta blockers causes you to become less fit (they typically reduce aerobic fitness by 10 percent), but exercise makes you more fit. Instead of feeling more fatigued and losing sleep, you have more energy and sleep much better. And importantly, the blood cholesterol and sugar abnormalities that can occur with beta blocker use do not occur, and your cholesterol levels and blood sugar handling improved with exercise.

Another hormone, insulin, which is made in our pancreas, circulates in our bloodstream and helps control sugar levels. Some of a condition referred to as insulin resistance. Their body needs to produce more insulin to control sugar. Although this condition most commonly occurs when we have too much body fat, it can occur for no apparent reason. These higher than usual insulin levels will increase our body’s salt stores by making our kidneys hold on to sodium. This results in higher blood pressure. Regular exercise reduces insulin levels, and this effect alone may reduce blood pressure.

  1. How Long Should I Exercise?

Start with just 20 minutes. You can split your physical activity into two 10 minute periods, if it is more convenient. Then add 2 minutes to each exercise day, every week, to reach a minimum of 30 minutes, three times each week.

However, just as some people require a large dose of medicine to control their blood pressure, you may require larger dose of exercise. We suggest , you can do this by increasing the number of exercise days.

  1. Choosing an Exercise

elect activities you like to do and that fit into the time constraints of your life. Don’t worry about your skill level or how you will look. For example, if you select swimming, constant activity for 20 minutes is sufficient for the first two weeks. It doesn’t matter how far you go or how well you can swim (if you are not a strong swimmer, make sure you can stand in the pool with your head out of the water). If you choose to ride a bike, try an exercycle (a stationary cycle). It is usually easier to use in the beginning, and unless you are climbing hills, your workout will be more efficient and probably more vigorous. With stationary bikes there is no starting and stopping at corners; you can’t fall off, become lost, or get a flat tire.

You only need to exercise at 65 to 75 percent of your maximum heart rate to lower blood pressure. If you are using a medicine that rate to lower blood pressure. If you are using a medicine that has changed your heart rate, you can use the convenient perceived exertion scale. On a scale of 0 to 10, where 0 represents the amount of exercise you should exert yourself at a level of 2 to 3. By rating your own level of exertion, you don’t have to rely on heart rates, which can be different from person to person and be altered by taking certain medications.

  1. Exercise guidelines while taking Blood-Pressure Lowering Drug

When you exercise, while taking blood pressure – lowing drugs, it is often best to use the perceived exertion scale and rely less on heart rate formulas.

  1. Exercise guidelines while taking Blood-Pressure Lowering Drug

When you exercise, while taking blood pressure – lowing drugs, it is often best to use the perceived exertion scale and rely less on heart rate formulas.

  • Using your heart rate as a guide is not very helpful when you take medications such as beta blockers, certain central alpha agonists (like clonidine), or calcium channel blockers. Beta blockers reduce endurance exercise capacity by lowering the heart rate, and through other effects. This characteristic is great for women with both coronary artery disease and high blood pressure because it allows exercise with reduced pain symptoms and lower blood pressure, resulting in less stress on the heart.
  • There are some specific recommendations for certain blood pressure drugs.
  • If you use diuretics, it is important that you receive enough potassium and magnesium to replace losses due to the drug and exercise.
  • Some vasodilator drugs can increase heart rates.
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Does A Hot Bath Really Burn As Many Calories As Exercise?



Does A Hot Bath Really Burn As Many Calories As Exercise?

Here’s what you need to know.
You may have heard about a new study that found taking a hot bath burns as many calories as working out. (And you may have also hopped in the bath immediately—you know, just in case.) The idea sounds too good to be true, and it is…sort of.

Here’s the deal: The study, which was published in the journal Temperature (no pun intended), was led by Steve Faulkner, Ph.D., an exercise physiologist at Loughborough University. Faulkner looked at the link between taking a hot bath, a person’s blood sugar, and how many calories they burned. He conducted the study on 14 men (some of whom were overweight). He discovered that taking a hot bath burns about 140 calories per hour. The baths also lowered the men’s peak blood sugar after they ate by about 10 percent more than exercising did.

It’s a pretty neat discovery, but you shouldn’t swap your regular gym sessions for hot baths just yet. You’re always burning calories, even when you’re just sitting on your butt, and the amount of calories each person burns doing a certain activity varies depending on a few factors, including their weight and body composition. Since these were men—and some of them were overweight—it’s likely that they’d burn more calories in the bath than an average-sized woman (meaning, you might not even burn 140 calories in the tub). And while 140 calories in an hour isn’t anything to brush off—that’s about the equivalent of a craft beer—you can burn that amount and then some so much faster by going for a run, lifting weights, or hitting the elliptical. Plus, you’d be seriously prune-y after an hour in the tub. (The Slim, Sexy, Strong Workout DVD is the fast, flexible workout you’ve been waiting for!)

 Jennifer Wider, M.D., says the study’s findings are part of a new body of research known as “passive heating.”“It’s a pretty new area of research, but several positive results have come out over the last few years,” she says. “It may become a lasting trend.”

Wider says more research is needed since the study was so small, but it demonstrates how “heath shock proteins,” a family of proteins that are produced by your cells in response to stressful conditions, can become elevated during both exercise and passive heating, like when you’re taking a sauna or hot bath. “These proteins may help the function of insulin and improve blood sugar control,” she says. And, if your blood sugar is controlled and even, you’re less likely to suffer from blood sugar crashes which can leave you feeling hungry—and make you more likely to overeat.

“The benefits of exercise have been well-established,” she says. “Even if future studies support the health benefits of passive heating, nothing replaces the multitude of benefits a person will get with regular exercise.” But, hey, if you want to lounge in a hot bath after you work out, it’s cool to know that you may end up burning a few extra calories in the process.

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Get Flatter Abs In 2 Weeks With This Fat-Blasting Workout



Get Flatter Abs In 2 Weeks With This Fat-Blasting Workout

Seriously, it works.

So… we were going to kick off this article by reminding you (as we often do in a nifty little parenthetical) that HIIT stands for high-intensity interval training. But in 2017, that sort of feels as unnecessary as explaining that OMG is an acronym for Oh My God. HIIT is now a part of our national lexicon, the bedrock of our fitness routines. See Exhibit A: our dear WH readers. In a recent Twitter poll, 55 percent of you said you love HIIT and do it often.

Keep that up! Science has proven (time and time again) that shifting between periods of fierce activity and active rest within the same workout stokes your fat burners, increasing your metabolism for up to 24 hours post-workout—fondly known as the afterburn effect. On paper, it’s genius. In practice? Well, that’s where things get complicated.

“All the research shows that the fat-melting magic of HIIT comes from the sharp up-and-down spikes in your heart rate, but most of us don’t give ourselves enough time to properly recover between work intervals because we think harder must be better,” says certified strength and conditioning specialist Robert Dos Remedios. “The reality is, when you don’t rest long enough, those spikes become more like soft waves, which reduces the effect of the workout.”

That doesn’t just dull the metabolic afterburn effect. Tired begets sloppy—and sloppy begets injury. “The same way you’re more likely to make an error on, say, a work report when you’re running on empty, your body is more likely to slack on form when it’s tanked,” says David Freeman, national program manager for the Alpha Training program at Life Time Fitness. “And improper technique is the root cause of most HIIT-induced traumas.”

So we asked Freeman to create a better, safer—more effective—HIIT-style plan. Rather than doing the greatest amount of work possible, you’ll focus on doing the best work possible. This three-days-a-week routine is designed to boost mobility for everyday movement, blast all your major muscle groups, and zap fat in tricky spots like your abs in as little as two weeks.

Here’s how it works: You’ll start each session with a quick preactivation warm-up (which studies show helps you get more out of your subsequent workout). That’s followed by either the Strength Series or Metabolic Conditioning circuit. Ideally, you want to complete two Strength Series and one Metabolic Conditioning workout each week, on nonconsecutive days, to ensure you don’t risk overtraining. (For example, you might do Strength on Monday and Friday, and Met Con on Wednesday.) You’ll see that every recovery interval is appropriately matched to the amount of work you’ll be doing, and each exercise keeps things simple (you won’t find any Olympic lifts or wacky plyos here). In a nutshell, this workout looks good on paper and—gratuitous acronym coming up!—IRL.

To wake the muscles you’ll be training, begin each workout with this three-part intro. Starting with the first exercise, perform the number of reps as indicated, then move on to the next exercise without resting (these are low intensity, so you shouldn’t need to). Repeat twice for three total sets.

RELATED: This Is the Best Exercise to Erase Your Belly Pooch, Says Science

Dynamic squat
2/12 Aaron Richter
DYNAMIC SQUAT

Stand with your feet shoulder-width apart, arms at your sides (a). Extend your arms at shoulder height in front of you, then, keeping your torso tall, push your hips back and bend your knees to lower your body as far as you can (b). Pause, then slowly push yourself back up to start. That’s one rep; do 20.

Standing band row
3/12 Aaron Richter
STANDING BAND ROW

Stand with feet shoulder-width apart on top of a resistance band and grasp each end of the band, palms facing each other. Bend your knees and hinge forward at your waist (a). With a flat back, lift the band up toward your sides, keeping your elbows close to your body (b). Lower to return to start. That’s one rep; do 20.

Here are more resistance band moves you can do to sculpt your arms and abs:

Ropeless jump rope
4/12 Aaron Richter
ROPELESS JUMP ROPE

Stand with feet a few inches apart, knees soft, your arms at your sides and palms turned slightly up (as if you were holding a jump rope). Bend your elbows to make small circles with your arms as you jump into the air with both feet. Jump as soon as you land, and continue jumping for 45 seconds.

Functional (read: everyday) movements set you up for long-term strength—and a tight bod. Treat the first two exercises here as a superset: Perform the first move, rest for 45 seconds, complete the second exercise, then repeat the pattern for four sets. Finish with the final exercise for a four-minute on-off bout.

Related: 7 Simple Exercises That Show Results After One Workout

Goblet squat
6/12 Aaron Richter
GOBLET SQUAT

Stand with your feet hip-width apart and hold a kettlebell in front of your chest, elbows pointing toward the floor (a). Slowly push your hips back and bend your knees to lower your body as far as you can, elbows brushing the insides of your knees (b). Quickly push yourself back up to start. That’s one rep; do 10 to 12, focusing on slow movement on the way down and a quick return to standing.

Single arm dumbbell row
7/12 Aaron Richter
SINGLE-ARM DUMBBELL ROW

Stand with a dumbbell in your right hand, left hand on your hip, your feet a few inches apart. Hinge forward at your hips so your arm is extended toward the floor and the weight is in front of your right knee (a). With a flat back, brace your abs as you pull the weight up toward your right side, keeping your elbow close to your body (b). That’s one rep; do eight to 10, then switch sides.

Bicycle crunch
8/12 Aaron Richter
BICYCLE CRUNCH

Lie flat on the floor with your hands behind your ears (a). Raise your legs, head, shoulders, and back off the floor, then use your abs to drive your left elbow toward your right knee, keeping your left leg straight (b). Release, then drive your right elbow toward your left knee, keeping your right leg straight (c). Continue alternating as fast as you can for 20 seconds, then rest for 10. Repeat for four minutes.

Related: 8 Photos That Prove Lifting Heavy Doesn’t Make You ‘Bulky’

DUMBBELL THRUSTER

Dumbbell thruster
10/12 Aaron Richter
DUMBBELL THRUSTER

Stand with feet shoulder-width apart and hold a pair of dumbbells at your shoulders (a). Push your hips back and down to lower into a squat (b). Push back up, pressing the dumbbells up until your arms are straight (c). Lower the weights to return to start. That’s one rep; do 15.

Related: This 20-Minute Tabata Workout Beats an Hour on the Treadmill

Box step up
11/12 Aaron Richter
BOX STEP-UP

Stand in front of a step or bench, hands on your hips, and place your left foot on the step (a). Press through your left foot to raise your body until your left leg is straight (b). Bend your left knee and lower your right foot to return to start. Repeat on the other side. That’s one rep; do 10.

Sprawl
12/12 Aaron Richter
SPRAWL

Stand with feet hip-width apart (a). Squat down so that your toes and hands are on the floor (b), then quickly kick your legs back to pushup position (c). Your hips should drop close to the floor. Quickly thrust yourself back up to start. That’s one rep; do eight.

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Donec nec ex leo. Morbi quis dui eget felis porttitor consectetur sed non massa. Etiam dui dolor, aliquam et fermentum a, aliquet at lectus. Vivamus in lectus risus. Pellentesque ut ultrices felis, quis pharetra elit. Nulla pellentesque porttitor maximus. Praesent congue nec lorem id dignissim. Nunc feugiat facilisis tincidunt. Donec arcu ante, vulputate vitae velit ultricies, ornare consectetur odio. Cras a varius elit. Vestibulum vitae dolor eu urna faucibus mollis. Cras varius faucibus tortor a viverra. Aliquam vel diam tempus, mollis orci at, feugiat augue.

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Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vestibulum imperdiet sollicitudin orci et tempus. Donec tristique turpis sit amet vulputate vestibulum. Curabitur id ex egestas est eleifend placerat. Nam aliquam tortor eu neque finibus, eget iaculis nisl facilisis. Maecenas suscipit, lacus sit amet facilisis vehicula, odio elit malesuada velit, sit amet varius nunc tellus eget erat. Nulla facilisi. Nam porta enim aliquam, euismod nunc at, lacinia enim. Praesent nec urna eu sem accumsan faucibus ac vel nunc. Maecenas vitae libero at ex pellentesque imperdiet. Pellentesque quis hendrerit purus. Duis auctor diam sed magna ornare bibendum. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Aenean nec lacus faucibus, pellentesque arcu sed, lobortis tellus.

Donec nec ex leo. Morbi quis dui eget felis porttitor consectetur sed non massa. Etiam dui dolor, aliquam et fermentum a, aliquet at lectus. Vivamus in lectus risus. Pellentesque ut ultrices felis, quis pharetra elit. Nulla pellentesque porttitor maximus. Praesent congue nec lorem id dignissim. Nunc feugiat facilisis tincidunt. Donec arcu ante, vulputate vitae velit ultricies, ornare consectetur odio. Cras a varius elit. Vestibulum vitae dolor eu urna faucibus mollis. Cras varius faucibus tortor a viverra. Aliquam vel diam tempus, mollis orci at, feugiat augue.

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Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vestibulum imperdiet sollicitudin orci et tempus. Donec tristique turpis sit amet vulputate vestibulum. Curabitur id ex egestas est eleifend placerat. Nam aliquam tortor eu neque finibus, eget iaculis nisl facilisis. Maecenas suscipit, lacus sit amet facilisis vehicula, odio elit malesuada velit, sit amet varius nunc tellus eget erat. Nulla facilisi. Nam porta enim aliquam, euismod nunc at, lacinia enim. Praesent nec urna eu sem accumsan faucibus ac vel nunc. Maecenas vitae libero at ex pellentesque imperdiet. Pellentesque quis hendrerit purus. Duis auctor diam sed magna ornare bibendum. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Aenean nec lacus faucibus, pellentesque arcu sed, lobortis tellus.

Donec nec ex leo. Morbi quis dui eget felis porttitor consectetur sed non massa. Etiam dui dolor, aliquam et fermentum a, aliquet at lectus. Vivamus in lectus risus. Pellentesque ut ultrices felis, quis pharetra elit. Nulla pellentesque porttitor maximus. Praesent congue nec lorem id dignissim. Nunc feugiat facilisis tincidunt. Donec arcu ante, vulputate vitae velit ultricies, ornare consectetur odio. Cras a varius elit. Vestibulum vitae dolor eu urna faucibus mollis. Cras varius faucibus tortor a viverra. Aliquam vel diam tempus, mollis orci at, feugiat augue.

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Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vestibulum imperdiet sollicitudin orci et tempus. Donec tristique turpis sit amet vulputate vestibulum. Curabitur id ex egestas est eleifend placerat. Nam aliquam tortor eu neque finibus, eget iaculis nisl facilisis. Maecenas suscipit, lacus sit amet facilisis vehicula, odio elit malesuada velit, sit amet varius nunc tellus eget erat. Nulla facilisi. Nam porta enim aliquam, euismod nunc at, lacinia enim. Praesent nec urna eu sem accumsan faucibus ac vel nunc. Maecenas vitae libero at ex pellentesque imperdiet. Pellentesque quis hendrerit purus. Duis auctor diam sed magna ornare bibendum. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Aenean nec lacus faucibus, pellentesque arcu sed, lobortis tellus.

Donec nec ex leo. Morbi quis dui eget felis porttitor consectetur sed non massa. Etiam dui dolor, aliquam et fermentum a, aliquet at lectus. Vivamus in lectus risus. Pellentesque ut ultrices felis, quis pharetra elit. Nulla pellentesque porttitor maximus. Praesent congue nec lorem id dignissim. Nunc feugiat facilisis tincidunt. Donec arcu ante, vulputate vitae velit ultricies, ornare consectetur odio. Cras a varius elit. Vestibulum vitae dolor eu urna faucibus mollis. Cras varius faucibus tortor a viverra. Aliquam vel diam tempus, mollis orci at, feugiat augue.

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Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vestibulum imperdiet sollicitudin orci et tempus. Donec tristique turpis sit amet vulputate vestibulum. Curabitur id ex egestas est eleifend placerat. Nam aliquam tortor eu neque finibus, eget iaculis nisl facilisis. Maecenas suscipit, lacus sit amet facilisis vehicula, odio elit malesuada velit, sit amet varius nunc tellus eget erat. Nulla facilisi. Nam porta enim aliquam, euismod nunc at, lacinia enim. Praesent nec urna eu sem accumsan faucibus ac vel nunc. Maecenas vitae libero at ex pellentesque imperdiet. Pellentesque quis hendrerit purus. Duis auctor diam sed magna ornare bibendum. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Aenean nec lacus faucibus, pellentesque arcu sed, lobortis tellus.

Donec nec ex leo. Morbi quis dui eget felis porttitor consectetur sed non massa. Etiam dui dolor, aliquam et fermentum a, aliquet at lectus. Vivamus in lectus risus. Pellentesque ut ultrices felis, quis pharetra elit. Nulla pellentesque porttitor maximus. Praesent congue nec lorem id dignissim. Nunc feugiat facilisis tincidunt. Donec arcu ante, vulputate vitae velit ultricies, ornare consectetur odio. Cras a varius elit. Vestibulum vitae dolor eu urna faucibus mollis. Cras varius faucibus tortor a viverra. Aliquam vel diam tempus, mollis orci at, feugiat augue.

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