StrongOver60 Podcast
Most people ask: “What is the best exercise for heart health?” Walking? Running? Strength training? Stretching? Breathing exercises? A new study published in BMJ Medicine [https://bmjmedicine.bmj.com/content/5/1/e001513] suggests that the better question may be: “Am I doing enough different types of movement?” The research found that people who regularly did a broader mix of physical activities had a lower risk of death — even after researchers adjusted for the total amount of exercise they did. In simple terms: Doing more exercise is good. But doing different types of exercise may be even better. 💪❤️ 🔬 What the research studied The study analyzed data from two long-running health studies: ✅ Nurses’ Health Study✅ Health Professionals Follow-Up Study Together, researchers followed more than 111,000 adults for over 30 years, covering more than 2.4 million person-years of follow-up. During this period, there were: ❤️ 9,901 cardiovascular deaths🎗️ 10,719 cancer deaths🌬️ 3,159 respiratory deaths📊 38,847 total deaths This gave researchers a powerful long-term view of how different types of physical activity may relate to longevity. 🧩 Key finding: variety matters The study looked not only at how much people exercised, but also at how many different types of activity they did. Activities included: 🚶 Walking🏃 Jogging and running🚴 Cycling🏊 Swimming🎾 Racquet sports🪜 Stair climbing💪 Resistance training🧘 Yoga, stretching, and toning🤸 Rowing or calisthenics🌿 Outdoor work The key result: People with the highest physical activity variety had a 19% lower risk of death from all causes compared with those with the lowest variety. Importantly, this remained true even after adjusting for total physical activity. That means the mix itself may matter — not just the amount. 📌 What the study found Most types of exercise were linked to lower mortality risk. Compared with people who did the least of each activity, those in the highest activity groups had lower all-cause mortality risk: 🚶 Walking: 17% lower risk🏃 Jogging: 11% lower risk🏃♂️ Running: 13% lower risk🎾 Racquet sports: 15% lower risk🪜 Stair climbing: 10% lower risk🤸 Rowing or calisthenics: 14% lower risk💪 Resistance exercise: 13% lower risk The study also found that benefits appeared to level off after around 20 MET-hours per week. For most people, the practical message is simple: You do not need extreme exercise volumes. A consistent and varied routine may be more useful than doing more and more of the same activity. ✅ 🧠 Why different exercises may help in different ways Your body is not one system. It includes your heart, blood vessels, muscles, lungs, joints, nervous system, metabolism, and brain. Different activities train these systems differently: 🚶 Walking supports daily cardiovascular health.🏃 Jogging and running challenge the heart and lungs.🚴 Cycling builds aerobic fitness with lower joint impact.💪 Resistance training supports muscle and metabolic health.🧘 Stretching improves mobility and reduces stiffness.🌬️ Breathing exercises support relaxation and recovery.🧱 Isometric exercises such as wall sits, planks, and handgrip exercises can be useful additions for people focused on blood pressure-friendly routines. The goal is not to find one perfect exercise. The goal is to build a smart mix. How to apply this research in real life ❤️ The mistake many people make is thinking they must choose one exercise. But this research suggests a better approach: Build a weekly routine with several types of movement. A simple heart health formula could include: 🚶 Walking most days🌬️ Breathing exercises several times per week💪 Resistance or isometric exercises 2–3 times per week🧘 Stretching or mobility 2–3 times per week🚴 Cycling, jogging, stair climbing, or other cardio when appropriate📊 Tracking your heart health trends over time This gives your body multiple positive signals: ❤️ Move more🫁 Breathe better💪 Build strength🧘 Reduce stiffness😌 Manage stress📈 Track progress How BreathNow [https://www.breathnow.app/breathnow] helps you build a varied heart health routine 📱❤️ This new research fits closely with the BreathNow app [https://apps.apple.com/us/app/breathnow-blood-pressure-app/id1551799152] approach. BreathNow is not just a blood pressure tracker. It helps users combine exercise tutorials, breathing, stress reduction, progress tracking, and personalized guidance. 🎥 1. Video tutorials for different exercise types Inside BreathNow, users can explore a broad library of guided routines, including: 🌬️ Breathing exercisesSlow breathing, 4-7-8 breathing, box breathing, and other calming routines. 🧱 Isometric exercisesGuided wall sits, planks, and handgrip-style routines. 🧘 Stretching and mobilitySimple movements to reduce stiffness, improve mobility, and support recovery. 🚶 Walking and light cardio habitsSupport for gentle daily movement and consistency. 💪 Strength-supportive exercisesSimple routines to help maintain muscle and support healthy aging. 😌 Relaxation and meditation videosCalming sessions for stress, sleep, and recovery. The goal is not to do everything at once. The goal is to choose the right mix for your body and lifestyle. 📊 2. Heart health tracking tools The study followed people for decades. That is a reminder that heart health is shaped by repeated habits — not one workout. BreathNow helps users track important heart health signals, including: 🩺 Blood pressure❤️ Heart rate📈 Heart rate variability (HRV)😌 Stress-related signals🌬️ Breathing sessions🏃 Exercise habits⌚ Apple Health trends📊 Long-term progress Tracking helps users understand what is working. One person may improve with more walking and breathing. Another may need more stretching, recovery, or strength work. Tracking turns exercise from guesswork into feedback. 📈 🤖 3. AI Coach for individualized plans Generic exercise advice does not know your body. It does not know your routine, recovery, stress patterns, or heart health trends. That is why BreathNow includes AI Coach. AI Coach can help create individualized plans based on the user’s available Apple Health data. It can help users answer questions like: 🤔 Am I doing enough variety?🚶 Should I walk more this week?🌬️ Should I add more breathing exercises?💪 Should I include more strength or isometric work?🧘 Do I need more stretching and recovery?📉 Are my blood pressure, HRV, or stress trends moving in the right direction? The study suggests that variety may matter. BreathNow ap [https://apps.apple.com/us/app/breathnow-blood-pressure-app/id1551799152]p helps users turn that idea into a realistic weekly plan. A simple weekly routine inspired by the research ❤️ Here is one example: Monday 🚶🌬️ Walk for 20–30 minutesDo 5 minutes of guided breathing Tuesday 💪🧘 Do a short isometric or strength routineAdd stretching or mobility Wednesday 🚶😌 Take an easy walkUse a relaxation or meditation video Thursday 🧱🌬️ Try a wall sit, plank, or handgrip-style tutorialFinish with slow breathing Friday 🚴🧘 Cycle, climb stairs, jog gently, or do other cardioAdd stretching Saturday 🚶📊 Take a longer walkReview blood pressure, heart rate, HRV, and stress trends Sunday 😌📅 Use a recovery sessionAsk AI Coach to help plan the next week This routine is simple, flexible, and varied. It focuses on consistency, progress tracking, and recovery — not extreme exercise. The bottom line ❤️ Move in different ways. Track your progress. Let your data guide your next step. ❤️ This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit strongover60.substack.com [https://strongover60.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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