The Oklahoman

FORMER NASA LEADER TO SIGN BOOKS, SPEAK

- BY RYAN STEWART For The Oklahoman [THINKSTOCK IMAGE]

You know exercise is good for you. In fact, some studies suggest the more you exercise, the greater the health benefits you’ll reap.

But can you do too much of a good thing?

A recent report from the American Physiologi­cal Society suggests that long-term high-intensity training can potentiall­y damage the heart — but it was also found to prolong life expectancy and decrease the overall risk of cardiovasc­ular mortality. Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation President Dr. Stephen Prescott said this report shouldn’t come as much of surprise, nor should it be cause for alarm for the typical gym goer.

“Improving your level of fitness yields a long list of benefits,” Prescott said. “It can lower blood pressure and heart rate, help you maintain a healthy weight, increase your resistance to infections and improve your mental acuity.”

Prescott, a physician and medical researcher, recommends regular exercise. But before you jump in and tackle a marathon, he suggests you do one important thing first: learn your family’s heart history.

If you have heart issues in your family, he said, you may set yourself up for trouble. In that case, too much strenuous exercise may be damaging to the heart.

The new report, which was published in Physiologi­cal Reviews, took a comprehens­ive look at all of the potential effects intense chronic endurance exercise can have on the heart. Results showed no evidence that a normal, healthy person was in danger. But there was a caveat when it came to lineage.

While frequent exercise is undoubtedl­y good, Prescott said, it is important to note that intense training causes changes in cardiac structure and function, which is normally good. That said, in some people, these changes can imitate heart damage and may aggravate inherited conditions like cardiomyop­athy, a condition resulting in an abnormal heart muscle. It may even mask problems like atheroscle­rosis, a disease where deadly plaque builds up in the arteries.

“We’ve seen signs for a long time that heart problems can result from excessive exercise,” Prescott said.

EDMOND — The University of Central Oklahoma College of Mathematic­s and Science will host UCO alumnus and retired NASA Mission Control Flight Director Milt Heflin for a book signing, reception and seminar at 2 p.m. Thursday at the W. Roger Webb Forensic Science Institute. It is open to the public. Heflin, an Oklahoma native, retired from NASA in 2013 after a 47-year career at the NASA Johnson Space Center. He will sign copies of his 2015 book “Go, Flight! The Unsung Heroes of Mission Control, 1965-1992,” at 2 p.m. in the atrium, followed by a reception. Heflin’s seminar, titled “It’s All About the Journey,” will begin at 4 p.m. in the auditorium. The talk will include career stories, experience­s and lessons learned, as well as Heflin’s thoughts on the future of human space exploratio­n. For more informatio­n, go to www.uco. edu/cms.

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