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Little Walking Cuts Blood Pressure
Study shows even short walks can improve your
health.
By Jennifer Warner WebMD Medical News
Thirty minutes of walking three times a week may
be enough to help lower blood pressure and start
you on the path to better health.
A new study shows that even a little bit of
weekly exercise is enough to lower blood
pressure and improve overall fitness. The
results showed that 30 minutes of walking three
times a week -- even if it was broken into
10-minute walks throughout the day -- was enough
to have a healthy effect on blood pressure as
well as measurements around the waist and hip.
National guidelines recommend that people
exercise at least 30 minutes a day on most days
of the week to maintain optimum health. But few
people achieve that goal, citing lack of time as
the biggest obstacle.
Researchers say these results may help motivate
people to fit in even a little exercise here and
there to benefit their health.
Even a Little Exercise Helps
In the study, published in the Journal of
Epidemiology and Community Health, researchers
invited 106 healthy but sedentary civil servants
to take part in an exercise program for 12
weeks.
About a third were told to briskly walk for 30
minutes, five days a week. Another third were
told to briskly walk for 30 minutes a day, three
days a week; the remaining third were told not
to change their sedentary lifestyle at all.
The participants wore pedometers to monitor
their walking, and researchers measured their
blood pressure, blood cholesterol, weight, hip
and waist size, and overall fitness before and
after the study.
The results showed systolic (the top number)
blood pressure dropped -- and waist and hip
measurements shrunk significantly -- in both the
three-day-a-week and five-day-a-week exercise
groups.
Systolic blood pressure dropped by 5 points
among those who exercised three days a week and
by 6 points among those who exercised five days
a week.
Waist and hip measurements fell by 2.6
centimeters and 2.4 centimeters respectively
among the three-day-a-week exercisers and by 2.5
centimeters and 2.2 centimeters among the
five-day-a-week exercise group.
No changes were found in the sedentary group.
Researcher Mark A. Tully of Queen’s University
in Belfast, Northern Ireland, says a decrease of
a few points in blood pressure and a few
centimeters in the waist and hips is enough to
significantly reduce the risk of death due to
heart disease.
They say the study shows even moderate exercise
below the recommended levels can still have
benefits.
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The results showed systolic (the
top number) blood pressure dropped -- and waist
and hip measurements shrunk significantly -- in
both the three-day-a-week and five-day-a-week
exercise groups.
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