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HEALTH AND FITNESS: The importance of functional fitness

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HEALTH AND FITNESS: The importance of functional fitness
Purposeful health includes train to enhance steadiness, coordination, energy, and endurance to boost the flexibility to carry out actions of each day dwelling. Virtually, practical health coaching goals to copy the actions
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Move More Month: Aspirus fitness expert breaks down exercise barriers – Tomahawk Leader Newspaper

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Move More Month: Aspirus fitness expert breaks down exercise barriers – Tomahawk Leader Newspaper

For the Tomahawk Leader

WISCONSIN – As part of Move More Month, a fitness expert with Aspirus Health provided tips on how to overcome challenges related to exercise.

“In today’s fast-paced world, finding time for exercise can seem daunting, as highlighted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) findings that only 24% of adults meet the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans,” Aspirus said in a release. “However, Aspirus La Vita Fitness Center Supervisor Sydney Renik believes that incorporating physical activity into our daily lives is not only possible, but also essential for our overall well-being.

Renik. Photo courtesy of Aspirus.

“Fitness affects all aspects of life,” Renik stated. “People who work out are often more social and mentally healthier because they feel better about themselves.”

Renik acknowledges the challenges individuals face and offers practical advice to overcome them.

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Duration of physical activity: Renik encourages rethinking the traditional approach of long workout sessions and highlights that even a few minutes of activity scattered throughout the day can make a significant difference.

“For people of all abilities, we can fit things in throughout the day; even if it’s just a couple of minutes here and there, that’s still really good,” Renik noted, emphasizing the value of consistency over duration.

Physical limitations: Instead of focusing on limitations, Renik advises finding movements that can be done. For instance, for those confined to a seated position, she suggests exercises that promote strength and flexibility and can be performed from a chair.

Lack of accountability: One of the key obstacles to maintaining a fitness routine is accountability. Renik recommends finding a workout partner or working with a trainer to stay motivated and on track.

“Knowing that someone else’s time is at stake, too, not just your own, makes a big difference in showing up,” she explained.

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Social comparison: Everyone has varying fitness levels and starts from a different place, Aspirus noted.

“Wherever you’re starting is okay,” Renik stated. “Getting where you need to go may take longer or go quicker than somebody else, but everybody’s fitness journey is different. You just have to get started and you’ll be well on your way.”

Aspirus said Renik’s insights underscore the significance of regular exercise in a healthy lifestyle.

“Despite the challenges, making fitness a priority is a rewarding practice that positively impacts overall health,” Aspirus stated.

“Not every workout is going to be a good one,” Renik said. “It’s important to have a positive mindset and remember that not every day is a good day, but that’s part of the journey.”

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Top fitness expert says stretching before or after ANY exercise is useless – and can even slow you down

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Top fitness expert says stretching before or after ANY exercise is useless – and can even slow you down

Despite what you’ve heard, stretching before a workout won’t make you more flexible – and stretching afterwards won’t make your muscles less sore, experts have revealed.

According to Professor Kieran O’Sullivan, who studies musculoskeletal pain at the University of Limerick, the 10 minutes you might spend flexing those hamstrings are effectively useless – and could even cause harm.

For the average person doing moderate amounts of exercise, ‘the value of stretching relative to other workouts becomes much less’, according to Professor O’Sullivan.

This is because research has show that stretching has little impact on muscle fibers  beyond that of exercise alone. Even walking can be enough to reduce the risk of strain and injury.

Khloe Kardashian shared photos of her doing various static stretches while on a trip to St. Barts in 2015

Khloe Kardashian has become well known for her fitness journey, and even hosted a reality show about the process, called 'Revenge Body'

Khloe Kardashian has become well known for her fitness journey, and even hosted a reality show about the process, called ‘Revenge Body’

Stretching works by temporarily reducing the amount of blood and oxygen flowing to your muscles, Professor Judy Delp, who teaches biomedical sciences at the Florida State University College of Medicine, told TIME. 

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This deficiency is said to motivate the body’s cells to deliver an excess of blood and nutrients to the muscle fibers – making them better able to cope with the impact of movement. 

But the evidence for those benefits are somewhat limited, Professor Nicolas Babault, physiology of exercise at the University of Burgundy, told TIME. 

Also, stretching after a workout doesn’t seem to improve muscle soreness in the coming days, according to a 2011 review of 12 studies on the topic by researchers from the UK-based nonprofit Cochrane. 

This stands in direct contrast to what fitness influencers and celebrities, such as the likes of Khloe Kardashian, share about their routines. 

Some experts say that movements involving dynamic stretching - like squats and walking lunges - are useful, but traditional types should be ditched.

Some experts say that movements involving dynamic stretching – like squats and walking lunges – are useful, but traditional types should be ditched.

 Kardashian trainer Joel Bouraima recently revealed that Khloé’s workout routine always starts with at least thirty minutes of stretching to ‘warm up’. 

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Folding over to touch your toes before or after a workout might make you feel like you’re getting more flexible, but what you’re actually feeling is your body relaxing Professor Kieran O’Sullivan said. 

These positions are called static stretches, and they involve holding poses for prolonged periods of time while breathing, Leigh-Ann Bramble Bramble physical therapist from the Hospital for Special Surgery’s Sports Rehabilitation and Performance Center, said.

But some studies have shown that holding these poses for prolonged periods of time might make it harder to gain speed – and might actually hurt.

‘Using static stretching in a warm-up prior to an athletic competition may actually negatively impact your performance. This is because static stretching may limit your body’s ability to react quickly,’ she said. 

Some trainers say if any movement is going to make a difference to muscle pain, it’s dynamic stretching. These stretches are repetitive movements that combine to activate muscles, joints and ligaments. 

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This includes things like torso twists, walking lunges, squats and leg swings. These movements get blood flowing to your muscles, increasing temperature and decreasing stiffness. 

In order to actually get more flexible you have to lengthen your muscles, which involves dynamic stretching, Polly de Mille, an exercise physiologist at Hospital for Special Surgery, said.

Lengthening only happens when you do this consistently over months and years, in routines like dancers or gymnasts. You can also incorporate things like foam rolling into your routine, to help move it along, Ms. de Mille said. 

But if you’re just trying to make sure you stay within a healthy range of mobility, then getting a little bit of walking activity each day should do it, Professor Delp said. 

‘If you walk regularly and you’re taking your joints through that range of motion, you are [stretching] without realizing it,’ Delp said. 

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This is more than enough for most people, said Professor Timothy Caulfield, who lectures on health law and science policy at the University of Alberta. Professor Caufield shared in a comment on X that though he hasn’t stretched in 15 years, he’s doing just fine. 

‘”…stretching either before or after your workout does little to impact muscle soreness over the next few days…” Agreed. I haven’t stretched in 15 years! #Move,’ Caufield wrote.

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Exercise Could Help Your Heart by Calming the Brain: Study

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Exercise Could Help Your Heart by Calming the Brain: Study

MONDAY, April 15, 2024 (HealthDay News) — You know exercise is great for your cardiovascular health, but new research suggests that your brain has a lot to do with it.

It’s all about physical activity’s ability to lower stress levels within the brain, explained a team at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) in Boston.

Bolstering that finding, their study found that exercise brought the greatest heart benefits to people with histories of depression.

“Physical activity was roughly twice as effective in lowering cardiovascular disease risk among those with depression,” noted study lead author Dr. Ahmed Tawakol. He’s an investigator and cardiologist in the Cardiovascular Imaging Research Center at MGH.

The study was published April 15 in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

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In the research, Tawakol’s team looked at a median 10 years of data on more than 50,000 people enrolled in the Mass General Brigham Biobank database. All of the participants kept records of their physical activity.

A subset of 774 also underwent brain scans and other tests measuring their stress-linked brain activity.

Over the decade of follow-up, almost 13% of the participants went on to develop heart disease, the researchers reported.

However, folks who met standard recommendations for physical activity were 23% less likely to receive such a diagnosis.

Those individuals also had markedly less brain activity associated with stress than people who exercised less, Tawakol’s team found.

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Specifically, fitter folk tended to have greater activity in the brain’s decision-making, impulse-control center, the prefrontal cortex. This area is known to wield some control over the brain’s stress centers, the Boston team explained.

Overall, it appeared that lowered stress levels did have a big role to play in improved heart health, the researchers said. The fact that exercise seemed to especially help folks with a history of depression reinforced that notion.

“Effects on the brain’s stress-related activity may explain this novel observation,” Tawakol said in an MGH news release.

He believes that doctors should mention the brain-heart connection whenever they counsel patients about the benefits of exercise.

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Find out more about exercise’s brain benefits at the Cleveland Clinic.

SOURCE: Massachusetts General Hospital, news release, April 15, 2024

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