
You
don’t have to sweat through a 30-minute workout to get the health
benefits of exercise. A study published in the January/February 2013
issue of the
American Journal of Health Promotion adds to
earlier findings from Queen's University in Ontario
, Canada that short
bouts of activity several times a day can do the trick and a small study
from Arizona State that showed that three 10-minute aerobic exercise
sessions daily was an effective alternative to longer bouts of exercise
to reduce the risk of heart disease in the study for participants who were
prehypertensive.
The researchers, from Bellarmine University in Kentucky, found few
differences between “less than 10-minutes” exercisers and those who
spent more time working out. But you do have to log enough of the short
bouts to add up to 150 minutes per week. The data for the study came
from a national survey of more than 6,000 people ages 18 to 85 whose
activity levels were measured along with their blood pressure,
cholesterol
and glucose levels. The less-than-10-minutes crowd had improvements in
blood pressure, cholesterol and glucose levels similar to those who
exercised for longer periods of time. You can squeeze exercise into your
day by taking the stairs instead of the elevator and exploring similar
opportunities to be active, noted Bellarmine researcher Paul Loprinzi,
Ph.D.
Sources:
Paul
D. Loprinzi and Bradley J. Cardinal (2013) Association Between Biologic
Outcomes and Objectively Measured Physical Activity Accumulated in
≥10-Minute Bouts and <10-Minute Bouts. American Journal of Health
Promotion: January/February 2013, Vol. 27, No. 3, pp. 143-151.
Dharini Bhammar et al “Effects of fractionized and continuous
exercise on 24-h ambulatory blood pressure,” Medicine and Science in
Sports and Exercise. 2012 Dec;44(12):2270-6. DOI:
10.1249/MSS.0b013e3182663117