Sherbrooke Record

Don’t overdo it when launching a new workout routine

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MOUNT FOREST CEMETERY

On June 11, 2018 at 7 p.m., the Coaticook Mount Forest Cemetery Company will hold its annual general meeting at 20 Gerin-lajoie St. (St. Stephen’s Church hall), Coaticook. All interested are welcome to attend. Informatio­n 819-849-6170.

ASK THE DOCTORS

By Eve Glazier, M.D., and Elizabeth Ko, M.D.

Dear Doctor: I’m a middle-aged guy, and I thought my health was fine. But I just got diagnosed with pre-diabetes, so I’ve started hitting the gym pretty hard — cardio five days a week, strength-training three days a week. Now I read that all this activity can raise my risk of a heart attack. What gives?

Dear Reader: It’s been several decades since the “feel the burn” exhortatio­ns of scores of fitness programs first started to seep into the American consciousn­ess. If a moderate amount of physical activity was good, the thinking went, then more — a lot more — just had to be better. But when a group of researcher­s recently looked at data from 25 years’ worth of exercise patterns in about 3,000 men and women enrolled in a long-term study about heart health, they uncovered surprising trends.

Individual­s who logged 7.5 hours or more of strenuous exercise per week were 27 percent more likely to develop a buildup of calcium and plaque in the arteries of their hearts by the time they reached middle age than were the more moderate exercisers. When the data was broken out by gender, the results were even more startling. White men had an 85 percent higher risk than did their less active peers of developing arterial calcificat­ion in their later years. This in turn translated to a rate of heart disease that was double that of the more moderate exercisers. And to add one more unexpected twist, these patterns didn’t apply to the black men in the study.

The higher levels of coronary artery calcificat­ion, often shortened to CAC, suggested that the more intense approach to exercise resulted in damaging stress to the arteries. More extreme exercise, both in effort and duration, has been shown to invoke an inflammato­ry response in the body. With everything we’re now learning about potential dangers of chronic inflammati­on, we look forward to future studies, which may shed light on this connection.

When it comes to your own exercise routine, we land on the side of moderation. We think that by becoming active, you’ve made a good start at addressing the conditions that put you on the road to pre-diabetes. (And before we get to specifics, we’re going to put in a plug for you to please take a clear-eyed look at your diet as well.)

Current guidelines recommend 150 minutes per week — that’s 2.5 hours — of moderate physical activity. In the most general sense, that’s any sustained activity performed at a pace where holding a conversati­on is possible but not easy. If you prefer a more rigorous workout, such as running, then the intensity goes up but the time spent drops to 75 minutes per week. That’s a workout where yes, you can say a phrase or two, but a conversati­on is out of the question. In addition, weight-bearing exercises that target all of the major muscle groups — that’s the legs, hips, back, abdomen, chest, shoulders and arms — should be done twice a week.

(Eve Glazier, M.D., MBA, is an internist and assistant professor of medicine at UCLA Health. Elizabeth Ko, M.D., is an internist and primary care physician at UCLA Health.)

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