Health Research Digest with Leo and Eva

EMS During Prolonged Sitting Increases Vascular Endothelial Function, Japanese Study Finds

22 min · I går
episode EMS During Prolonged Sitting Increases Vascular Endothelial Function, Japanese Study Finds cover

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In a peer-reviewed study published in Physical Therapy Research (2022), 12 healthy men completed 1 hour of prolonged sitting. One session included 20 minutes of lower-body  EMS using belt electrodes at 4 Hz and 50% maximum intensity. In the control trial, vascular endothelial function declined, with FMD dropping significantly. In the  EMS  trial, normalised flow-mediated dilation (nFMD) of the brachial artery rose significantly from 0.84 ± 0.43 to 1.14 ± 0.77. Researchers from Osaka Yukioka College and Tokushima University showed passive muscle contractions increase blood flow, shear stress and nitric oxide while reducing sympathetic activity. This credible evidence proves  EMS  supports better circulation during sitting. Read the full post for practical desk-worker insights and mechanisms. Full study: https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/ems-prolonged-sitting-vascular-endothelial-function-study

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This peer-reviewed trial from Japan’s Dokkyo Medical University proves EMS legitimately supports blood sugar management. Scientists used continuous Flash Glucose Monitoring and frequent blood tests to meticulously track patients who received a 30-minute EMS session after consuming a meal. The measured evidence is striking: EMS significantly lowered immediate blood glucose levels (dropping from 9.5 to 7.1 mmol) and reduced 24-hour sugar roller-coasters (MAGE dropped from 4.8 to 3.8 mmol/dL) by forcing type II muscle fibers to rapidly burn glucose for energy. Read our full blog post below to discover exactly how this groundbreaking clinical science works and how it can easily translate into your own daily wellness routine! Full info: https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/ems-technology-stops-post-meal-sugar-spikes-science

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This 2026 University of Georgia study suggests EMS may support circulation-related responses without pills or tablets, by directly activating muscles. Researchers stimulated eight lower-body muscle groups for 10 minutes and measured real physiological changes: whole-body oxygen use rose 36%, heart rate rose 22%, and muscle oxygen use increased around 12-fold. Using Doppler ultrasound, they also recorded a significant change in femoral artery blood-flow velocity after stimulation. This is legitimate research because it used named scientists, ethics approval, scientific equipment, and published data. Read the full blog to see what EMS may mean for everyday wellness. https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/can-full-body-ems-support-blood-flow-without-pills

1. juli 202621 min
episode EMS During Prolonged Sitting Increases Vascular Endothelial Function, Japanese Study Finds artwork

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In a peer-reviewed study published in Physical Therapy Research (2022), 12 healthy men completed 1 hour of prolonged sitting. One session included 20 minutes of lower-body  EMS using belt electrodes at 4 Hz and 50% maximum intensity. In the control trial, vascular endothelial function declined, with FMD dropping significantly. In the  EMS  trial, normalised flow-mediated dilation (nFMD) of the brachial artery rose significantly from 0.84 ± 0.43 to 1.14 ± 0.77. Researchers from Osaka Yukioka College and Tokushima University showed passive muscle contractions increase blood flow, shear stress and nitric oxide while reducing sympathetic activity. This credible evidence proves  EMS  supports better circulation during sitting. Read the full post for practical desk-worker insights and mechanisms. Full study: https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/ems-prolonged-sitting-vascular-endothelial-function-study

Yesterday22 min
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