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Fitness
How to Start a Fitness Program
If you want to become fit and use exercise to help prevent a heart
attack, first check with your doctor to make sure that you do not
have anything wrong with your heart or blood vessels.
Intense exercise increases your risk for a heart attack if you
already have a damaged heart. Pick any sport or activity that uses
continuous motion (such as running, cycling, swimming, skating,
rowing, dancing) that you think you might enjoy. Start out at a
relaxed pace until your muscles feel heavy and then stop. For the
first several days or weeks you may be able to exercise only for
a few minutes. If your muscles feel sore the next day, take the
day off.
Increase the amount of time gradually until you can exercise 30
minutes a day at a relaxed pace and not feel sore. Then you are
ready to begin your training for fitness.
Try to increase the intensity of your exercise once a week. Do
your jogging, cycling or whatever you have chosen as your sport
at a slow pace to warm up. Then gradually increase the pace until
you start to feel short of breath and your muscles start to feel
sore, and then slow down. Then when you recover, pick up the pace
again. Repeat these surges until your muscles start to stiffen and
then quit for the day. Take the next day off and go easy the rest
of the week. Then once a week, keep on making your one-day-a-week
hard workout harder and harder. You will be continuously increasing
your level of fitness.
The only way to strengthen any muscle is to contract the muscle
against increasingly greater resistance. Your heart is a muscle,
so the only way to make your heart stronger is to contract it against
greater resistance. When you exercise, you alternately contract
and relax your skeletal muscles. This alternate contraction and
relaxation squeezes the veins near the muscles to pump blood toward
the heart. Your heart is muscular balloon. The increased flow of
blood returning to your heart goes inside the heart to stretch the
balloon and the heart has to contract with greater force to pump
the blood from inside the heart toward the body. The increased amount
of blood inside the heart stretches the heart muscle to make it
stronger. The harder you contract your skeletal muscles, the more
blood you pump toward your heart, the greater the stretch on the
heart to make it stronger.
So fitness is determined more by how hard you exercise than by
how much you exercise because the harder you exercise, the stronger
your heart muscle becomes. Going out and running 100 miles a week
slowly does not make you very fit because you are not strengthening
your heart very much with a little increase in circulation of blood,
no matter how long you do it. Compare lifting a very light weight
a thousand times in a row to lifting a very heavy weight 10 times
in a row. The person lifting the heavy weight 10 times will become
stronger than the person lifting a light weight a thousand times.
JAMA 10/23/02
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