This article tells you the truth about exercise and why you need to exercise at any age.
Thyfault, PhD, is an associate professor at Kansas University Medical Center, where he studies the health effects of exercise.
Thyfault, PhD, is an associate professor at Kansas University Medical Center, where he studies the health effects of exercise.
“Exercise and physical activity is not something that you just do extra in your life to get extra healthy. Rather, it’s something that’s absolutely necessary for normal function,” he says.
Thyfault hopes to make more people aware that exercise benefits the body in ways that go far beyond muscle tissue and burning fat.
“We were meant to exercise quite a bit every day to survive, and now we’ve taken it away, and we’re actually causing dysfunction,” he says.
Exercise and Blood Sugar
He’s passionate about exercise because his research has shown again and again how critical it is to health. He says when he’s tried to cause disease, for example, by feeding rats or mice high-fat diets, he can’t do it as long as the animals are exercising.
“Inactivity is the foundational piece that has to be there for these diseases to develop,” he says.
In one experiment, for example, he took healthy people who were walking at least 10,000 steps a day and asked them to walk less -- around 5,000 steps a day, about as much exercise as the average American gets.
No comments:
Post a Comment