(Press-News.org) Biking, running and walking are all good for you. But the strain can be tough if you're overweight, have arthritis or suffer from other joint problems or injuries. What to do? Just add water.
A study presented today at the Canadian Cardiovascular Congress found that people who used an immersible ergocycle – basically an exercise bike in a pool – had just about the equivalent workout to using a typical stationary bike.
"If you can't train on land, you can train in the water and have the same benefits in terms of improving aerobic fitness," says Dr. Martin Juneau, director of prevention at the Montreal Heart Institute.
He says people might assume that exercising in the water can't be as valuable as exercising on land. Because of the resistance of the water when you move, it doesn't seem like you can work as hard. This new study indicates otherwise.
Healthy participants did exercise tests on both the land and water cycling machines (with water up to chest level). They increased their intensity minute by minute until exhaustion.
Dr. Juneau reports that the maximal oxygen consumption – which tells you whether it was a good workout – was almost the same using both types of cycles.
His study colleague Dr. Mathieu Gayda, a clinical exercise physiologist at the Montreal Heart Institute, adds: "Exercise during water immersion may be even more efficient from a cardiorespiratory standpoint."
Another finding, says Dr. Juneau, is that the heart rate of the participants was a little lower in the water.
"You pump more blood for each beat, so don't need as many heartbeats, because the pressure of the water on your legs and lower body makes the blood return more effectively to the heart. That's interesting data that hasn't been studied thoroughly before," says Dr. Juneau.
Considering the number of people who can find it difficult to exercise on land, the water option is promising, says Dr. Juneau. He says that swimming may be the best exercise of all but not everyone can swim. With the workout benefits, the low stress of moving in the water and the reduced chance of injury, "this is a great alternative," he says.
Heart and Stroke Foundation spokesperson Dr. Beth Abramson notes that 85 per cent of Canadians do not accumulate the recommended 150 minutes per week of moderate- to vigorous-intensity physical activity.
"Inactive people who become physically active can reduce their risk of heart attack risk by 35 to 55 per cent, plus lower their chance of developing several other conditions, cut stress levels and increase energy," says Dr. Abramson. "Even if you have difficulty moving more, there are always solutions, as this study shows. This is encouraging given the aging population – it's never too late or too difficult to make a lifestyle change."
### The Canadian Cardiovascular Congress 2012 is co-hosted by the Heart and Stroke Foundation and the Canadian Cardiovascular Society.
Statements and conclusions of study authors are solely those of the study authors and do not necessarily reflect Foundation or CCS policy or position. The Heart and Stroke Foundation and the Canadian Cardiovascular Society make no representation or warranty as to their accuracy or reliability.
The Heart and Stroke Foundation (heartandstroke.ca), a volunteer-based health charity, leads in eliminating heart disease and stroke and reducing their impact through the advancement of research and its application, the promotion of healthy living and advocacy.
Healthy lives free of heart disease and stroke. Together we will make it happen.
For more information and/or interviews, contact the
CCC 2012 MEDIA OFFICE AT 416-585-3781 (Oct 28-31)
OR
Diane Hargrave Public Relations
416-467-9954 ext. 104
dhprbks@interlog.com
Congress information and media registration is at www.cardiocongress.org
After October 31, 2012 contact:
Jane-Diane Fraser
Heart and Stroke Foundation
(613) 569-4361 ext 273
jfraser@hsf.ca
Everyone in the pool! Water workouts just as good as on land
Same aerobic benefits seen, with less wear and tear, according to study
2012-10-30
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New pediatric heart failure guidelines a first in Canada
2012-10-30
The Canadian Cardiovascular Society is the first in Canada to issue guidelines aimed at helping primary care and emergency physicians, as well as specialists, recognize and manage heart failure in children. The guidelines were released today at the Canadian Cardiovascular Congress.
Pediatric heart failure is often fatal and occurs in about 3,000 children annually in North America. Worldwide, the problem is far greater and the causes are diverse. To date there has been little guidance to assist practitioners who deal with children with heart failure.
"The previous guidelines, ...
At 6 months, development of children with autism like those without
2012-10-30
The development of children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is much like that of children without ASD at 6 months of age, but differs afterwards. That's the main finding of the largest prospective, longitudinal study to date comparing children with early and later diagnosis of ASD with children without ASD. The study appears in the journal Child Development and has implications for clinical work, public health, and policy.
The study was conducted by researchers at the Kennedy Krieger Institute, the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg ...
Homelessness, high mobility threaten children's achievement
2012-10-30
Children who are homeless or move frequently have chronically lower math and reading skills than other low-income students who don't move as much.
That's the finding of a new longitudinal study on children's risk and resilience conducted through a university-community partnership by researchers at the University of Minnesota, the Minneapolis Public Schools, the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Iowa, and Hong Kong Sue Yan University. The study appears in the journal Child Development.
About one million American school children are homeless each year, and ...
Honeybees harbor antibiotic-resistance genes
2012-10-30
Bacteria in the guts of honeybees are highly resistant to the antibiotic tetracycline, probably as a result of decades of preventive antibiotic use in domesticated hives. Researchers from Yale University identified eight different tetracycline resistance genes among U.S. honeybees that were exposed to the antibiotic, but the genes were largely absent in bees from countries where such antibiotic use is banned. The study appears on October 30 in mBio®, the online open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology.
"It [resistance] seems to be everywhere in the ...
During IVF sexual relationships, satisfaction, can suffer
2012-10-30
An Indiana University study has found that women undergoing in-vitro fertilization report that the process of infertility treatment has many negative impacts on their sexual relationship with their partner. Little attention has been given to the sexual dynamics of couples as they navigate infertility and treatments such as IVF, despite the important role that sex plays in a couple's attempt to conceive a child.
"Sex is for pleasure and for reproduction, but attention to pleasure often goes by the wayside for people struggling to conceive," said Nicole Smith, a doctoral ...
Soda consumption, screen time, team sports at school influence students' weight
2012-10-30
Soda consumption, TV and video/computer games, and the frequency of meals heavily influenced students' weight in an Indiana University study that examined the impact of a school-based obesity intervention program over an 18-month period.
More soda consumption and screen time meant students were more likely to be overweight or to gain weight. The more frequently students ate meals each day, the less likely they were to stay overweight or gain weight during the study, which examined the Healthy, Energetic, Ready, Outstanding, Enthusiastic Schools program.
Dong-Chul ...
Indoor workplace smoking bans garner strong support from Hoosiers
2012-10-30
Public health researchers examining data from an Indiana Adult Tobacco Survey found nearly 75 percent of Hoosiers support a statewide or community indoor workplace smoking ban.
The results of this study could be important in increasing focused public awareness strategies aimed at reducing exposure to secondhand smoke, said Terrell Zollinger, professor of epidemiology and associate director of the Center for Health Policy in the Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, who led the study.
Indiana is 49th on the ...
Divorce Can Be Complicated by Unwise Social Media Use
2012-10-30
Facebook can be hazardous to marriages in Arizona -- and to divorces as well. The most obvious link with divorce is that spouses may be led to stray when reconnecting with old loves via social media. Even without going to that extreme, though, people may behave unwisely online, forgetting that they have a wide audience. Increasingly, people's postings on social media accounts are being used as evidence in divorce cases, even if their account is set up as private.
Sharing relationship problems with Facebook friends has potentially farther-reaching consequences than sitting ...
Debt Discharge in Chapter 7 Bankruptcy
2012-10-30
Chapter 7 bankruptcy is also called "liquidation bankruptcy" because the trustee in the case liquidates all of the filer's non-exempt assets to pay off the creditors in the case. In many cases, the filer has few -- or no -- non-exempt assets, so very little money ends up going to creditors.
Without the protections that filing bankruptcyoffers, particularly the debt discharge, many would not be able to make it and get out of debt. Bankruptcy can give people the opportunity to make a fresh start, which they otherwise would not have. People considering bankruptcy ...
Maryland Court of Appeals to Decide Fate of Contributory Negligence
2012-10-30
A recent lawsuit stemming from the collapse of a soccer goal could change more than 150 years of Maryland personal injury law and give plaintiffs a greater chance of being awarded damages in personal injury lawsuits.
Background of Lawsuit
In 2008, Kyle Coleman was attending late-summer soccer practice at a middle school in Fulton, Maryland. While taking some warm-up shots at an empty goal, Coleman grabbed the goal's crossbar as he was retrieving a ball, causing the unanchored goal to fall. The crossbar crashed into his face and crushed the bones around his eye. As ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Truly autonomous AI is on the horizon
California’s marine protected areas boost fish populations across the state
Poachers’ social media posts reveal alarming extent of illegal wildlife hunting in Lebanon
Examining the potential environmental effects of mining the world’s largest lithium deposit
Chicken ‘woody breast’ detection improved with advanced machine learning model
Around 1 in 5 UK medical students considers dropping out, study suggests
Poor childhood social and cognitive skills combo linked to teens’ poor exam results
Position menstrual cups carefully to avoid possible kidney problems, doctors urge
Yale scientists recode the genome for programmable synthetic proteins
MiR-128-3p mediates MRP2 internalization in estrogen-induced cholestasis through targeting PDZK1
Bleeding risk with apixaban and dabigatran similar to aspirin
MD Anderson Research Highlights for February 10, 2025
Ready (or not) for love? Your friends likely agree
Health care students and clinicians support integrated care education
Scientists from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution identify heat-resistant kelp strain
Rice-BCM research enables detection of hazardous chemicals in human placenta with unprecedented speed and precision
Researchers are driving the charge of zero emissions
USC-led study finds potential new drug target for Alzheimer’s disease
Why you need to subscribe to NFCR’s new podcast, “All Things Cancer”
Research pinpoints weakness in lung cancer’s defenses
New study highlights healthcare utilization shifts among Long COVID patients in Colorado after diagnosis
Majority of kids who die in mass shootings killed by family members, Stanford Medicine-led study shows
How perception may shape health safety-related assessments
Potential new strategy for relieving anxiety
Scientists develop corrosion-induced electrodes for biomass upgrading
Contemporary hormonal contraception and risk of venous thromboembolism
Victim-shooter relationships in mass shootings involving child victims
Health care company payouts favor shareholders, new research shows
Glucose-lowering medications and risk of COPD exacerbations in patients with type 2 diabetes
Low to moderate prenatal alcohol exposure and facial shape of children at ages 6 to 8
[Press-News.org] Everyone in the pool! Water workouts just as good as on landSame aerobic benefits seen, with less wear and tear, according to study