Tag: aerobic exercise

Why Walking May Be the Most Underrated Exercise
Weight Loss & Fat Burning

Why Walking May Be the Most Underrated Exercise

At dawn in Accra, the streets begin to fill with movement long before traffic does. Market women walk briskly with baskets balanced expertly on their heads. Young professionals squeeze in a jog before work. Along the coast, groups gather for weekend aerobics sessions with loud music and even louder laughter. None of it looks dramatic, yet this simple movement may be one of the strongest tools for long-term health. Aerobic exercise — often called cardio — is sometimes treated as something reserved for gym memberships, expensive treadmills, or elite athletes. In reality, it is far more ordinary. It is the steady movement that keeps the heart pumping, the lungs working, and the body using oxygen efficiently. Walking, dancing, swimming, cycling, and even climbing stairs all count. ...
Want to Improve Your Memory? The Right Type of Exercise Can Give It a Boost
Muscle Building & Strength Training

Want to Improve Your Memory? The Right Type of Exercise Can Give It a Boost

Neuroscientists have captured direct evidence that a brief burst of aerobic exercise creates 'brain ripples' in the hippocampus, strengthening memory storage and retrieval. Memory can be such a fickle thing. Whether trying to remember people's names, recall a list of items you need from the shop, or preparing for an important exam or job interview, information that was in your head one minute can flutter out the next. But there is an easy way you can give your memory an instant boost when trying to learn new information — jump on an exercise bike for a few minutes or take a brisk walk. Research shows that a brief bout of physical exercise can create "ripples" of activity in your brain that help you store and retrieve memories. The Science of Brain Ripples A new study led by...
Muscle Building & Strength Training

Midlife Fitness Extends Health Span and Overall Life Expectancy, Landmark Study Finds

– Higher cardiorespiratory fitness linked to later onset of chronic disease and more disease-free years – How fit you are in midlife may help determine not just how long you live, but how many of those years are spent in good health, according to a new study published today in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC), the flagship journal of the American College of Cardiology. The study found that adults with higher levels of cardiorespiratory fitness in midlife lived longer, developed fewer chronic diseases, and spent more years free from serious illness compared with those who were less fit. These benefits were observed in both men and women. Cardiorespiratory fitness, how well the heart and lungs supply oxygen during physical activity, is already known to reduce...