Most people know that you have to warm up skeletal muscles to help protect them from injury, but many do not know that warming up the heart muscle also helps to prevent heart attacks in people with blocked arteries leading to the heart
Before you try to run very fast, you can protect your muscles from injury by performing a series of runs of gradually-increasing intensity to increase the circulation of blood to your muscles. The same principle applies to the heart. Angina is a condition in which the blood vessels leading to the heart are partially blocked so the person has no pain at rest, but during exercise, the blocked arteries don't permit enough blood to get through to the heart muscles, causing pain. A study from the Quebec Heart Institute shows that exercising very slowly before a person with angina picks up the pace allows him to exercise more intensely before he feels heart pain.
If you have any suspicion of heart problems, always check with your doctor before you begin an exercise program or increase the intensity of your existing program.
Archive
-
▼
2006
(51)
-
▼
December
(14)
- 100 Push-Ups (New Year's Resolution #1)
- Gain weight every year? You're not alone!
- Blood pressure drugs: which are best for exercisers?
- Lactic acid helps muscles
- Interval Training
- Are You Fit?
- Run faster!
- Warm up your heart
- Low testosterone - high cholesterol
- Fruit juices: better than soft drinks?
- Wrinkles: Can they be prevented?
- Itching, can't see anything?
- Increase endurance with low-glycemic meal
- High blood pressure during exercise: dangerous?
-
▼
December
(14)
Popular Posts
-
To use rope-jumping for fitness, you need to be skilled enough to jump continuously for twenty to thirty minutes, and jumping that long and ...
-
Of no other fat-loss activity -- eating less, walking on a treadmill, doing sit-ups -- can it be said that participants eagerly count the mi...
-
Some of the weight loss articles out there these days are getting a little nutty. New scientific studies that shed light on how metabolism w...
-
Aging does not cause you to lose muscles. Loss of muscle is caused by lack of exercise. You can preserve both muscle size and strength by co...
-
Athletes tend to push themselves 120 percent while exercising because their main objective is to jump higher, run faster or become stronger....
0 comments:
Post a Comment