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What you need to know about cardio

2025/1/13
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Life Kit: Health

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Dr. Jane Morgan
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Marielle: 我主持了本期关于有氧运动的播客节目,旨在探讨有氧运动的益处、如何进行以及运动量。节目中,我采访了心脏病专家Jane Morgan医生,就人们普遍关心的问题,例如哪些活动算作有氧运动、达到有氧运动效果所需的强度以及每周应进行多少有氧运动等,进行了深入探讨。我们还讨论了如何测量心率以监测运动强度,以及如何根据自身情况选择适合自己的运动方式。 Jane Morgan医生强调了有氧运动对心脏健康的重要性,并指出其在预防心脏病、降低体重、控制血压、改善睡眠质量和管理糖尿病等方面发挥着关键作用。她还解释了动脉粥样硬化斑块的形成机制以及有氧运动如何通过燃烧卡路里和胆固醇来减少斑块的形成,从而降低心脏病风险。 此外,我们还讨论了如何将每日30分钟的运动分成几次进行,例如进行“运动零食”,以提高新陈代谢并促进长寿。总而言之,本节目旨在帮助听众了解有氧运动的益处、如何进行以及如何将其融入日常生活,从而改善心脏健康和整体健康状况。 Dr. Jane Morgan: 我是一名心脏病专家,在节目中,我分享了关于有氧运动的专业知识。首先,我强调了心脏病是美国主要的死因,也是女性的头号杀手,这突显了有氧运动在预防心脏病方面的关键作用。 我解释了有氧运动的定义,即任何能够提高心率的活动,并且不必每次都达到极限。我们可以通过可穿戴设备或手动测量脉搏来监测心率,并根据最大心率(220减去年龄)的50%到85%来确定目标心率范围。中等强度运动的目标心率范围较低,剧烈强度运动的目标心率范围较高。 我详细介绍了各种可以作为有氧运动的活动,例如游泳、骑自行车、远足、跑步、网球、步行等,并指出任何速度的步行都能带来心血管益处,但速度越快,心血管风险降低得越多。我还解释了有氧运动如何通过燃烧卡路里和胆固醇来减少动脉粥样硬化斑块的形成,从而降低心脏病风险。 最后,我建议大家可以将每日30分钟的运动分成几次进行,例如进行“运动零食”,以提高新陈代谢并促进长寿。总而言之,我的观点是有氧运动对心脏健康至关重要,有助于预防疾病,提高生活质量,并促进长寿。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

Why is cardio important for heart health?

Cardio helps prevent heart disease by decreasing the likelihood of plaque buildup in arteries, which can block blood flow and cause heart attacks. It also burns calories and cholesterol, reducing the risk of atherosclerosis. Regular cardio exercise improves overall heart function and longevity.

What are the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' exercise recommendations for adults?

Adults should engage in strength training twice a week and perform 150 minutes of moderate-intensity cardio or 75 minutes of vigorous-intensity cardio weekly. Alternatively, a combination of both can be used to meet the guidelines.

How can you calculate your maximum heart rate for cardio exercise?

Your maximum heart rate can be calculated using the formula: 220 minus your age. For example, a 30-year-old would have a maximum heart rate of 190 beats per minute. During exercise, aim for 50-85% of this number to stay in the target heart rate zone.

What activities count as cardio?

Activities like swimming, biking, hiking, running, tennis, walking, dancing, and even household chores like yard work or climbing stairs can count as cardio. Anything that elevates your heart rate into the target zone qualifies as cardio.

What is 'exercise snacking' and how does it benefit health?

Exercise snacking involves breaking up exercise into short, frequent bursts throughout the day, such as taking 5-10 minute breaks to walk, climb stairs, or do light exercises. This approach increases metabolism, contributes to longevity, and makes it easier to meet daily exercise goals.

How does walking contribute to cardiovascular health?

Walking at any pace provides cardiovascular benefits and reduces the risk of stroke. Faster walking paces further decrease cardiovascular risk, but even slow walking is beneficial. It's an accessible form of cardio that can be done alone or in groups.

What are the broader health benefits of cardio beyond heart health?

Cardio helps manage weight, lowers blood pressure, improves diabetes management, enhances sleep quality, and reduces stress. It also supports overall longevity and quality of life by keeping the body active and healthy.

How can you measure your heart rate during exercise?

Heart rate can be measured using wearable devices like smartwatches or fitness rings, gym equipment with sensors, or manually by finding your pulse on your neck and counting beats for 60 seconds. This helps monitor exercise intensity.

Chapters
This chapter defines cardio exercise, clarifies its importance in preventing heart disease, the leading cause of death in America, and emphasizes the significance of regular physical activity for overall health. It also introduces the recommended amount of weekly cardio exercise and alternative approaches for incorporating it into daily life.
  • Heart disease is the leading cause of death in America.
  • Recommended cardio exercise: 150 minutes of moderate intensity or 75 minutes of vigorous intensity per week.
  • The importance of regular physical activity for preventing chronic diseases.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

Support for NPR and the following message come from our sponsor, Whole Foods Market. Find great everyday prices on responsibly farmed salmon, no antibiotics ever chicken breasts, organic strawberries, and more at Whole Foods Market. You're listening to Life Kit from NPR. Hey everybody, it's Marielle. Heart disease is the leading cause of death in America, accounting for one in five deaths in 2022. It's also the number one killer of women in the U.S.,

Even if you add breast cancer and bring in all the other cancers of the body and add them to breast cancer, heart disease is still number one. That's Dr. Jane Morgan. She's a cardiologist and vice president of medical affairs for Hello Heart. It's an app you can use to track your cardiovascular health.

So those stark numbers bring me to the point of today's episode. We're talking about cardio, the kind of exercise that gets your heart rate up and can help prevent heart disease. That's really what people mean when they say cardio. They mean to increase your heart rate and to get that heart rate up such that your heart is really pumping. I personally have always wondered what counts as cardio, how intense it needs to be to get the benefits, how much of it you should be doing every day or week.

whether you can break it up into short bursts or you need to do at least half an hour at a time. On this episode of Life Kit, I talk with Dr. Morgan about all of that and more. This message comes from Charles Schwab. When it comes to managing your wealth, Schwab gives you more choices, like full-service wealth management and advice when you need it. You can also invest on your own and trade on Thinkorswim. Visit Schwab.com to learn more.

Support for NPR and the following message come from our sponsor, Whole Foods Market, where you can enjoy savings every day. Walk the store and see the savings for yourself. In the seafood department, look for the yellow low-price sign on Whole Foods' responsibly farmed salmon. Great for grilling. Buttery, fatty yet lean. Nice thick fillets. Or how about no antibiotics ever chicken breasts, organic strawberries, and so much more. There are so many ways to save at Whole Foods Market. Now you know.

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This message comes from Money for Couples, a new book and podcast that help you and your partner build and share financial vision. Discover clear, actionable steps for spending and saving that bring you closer together. Start your financial future today. Search Money for Couples wherever you listen. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services puts out guidelines for how much exercise adults should be getting every week.

They recommend that you do strength training twice a week. That could be weightlifting or Pilates, bodyweight exercises, even chores like carrying grocery bags. And then they recommend some type of cardio, specifically 150 minutes of moderate intensity exercise, 75 minutes of vigorous exercise, or some combination of the two every week. And we'll get into what those terms mean later.

But Dr. Morgan says sometimes it's hard to get all that done, and you might get overwhelmed if you're trying to keep track to that extent. And I often like to talk with people and tell them to simply pick an activity that they like to do, and then to do that at least five times a week for at least 30 minutes. That's really the sweet spot of where we need to be, about 150 minutes of exercise, and

And the key is to really make certain that we are moving. Our bodies are made to move. Our bodies are really not made for the way that we live now. And that's why we're developing a lot of these chronic diseases. Our bodies are made to be in motion.

Takeaway one, cardio, simply put, is getting your heart rate up. That doesn't mean you have to push yourself to the limit every time you're working out. You can have cardio without high intensity exercising. And how can you measure that? Like, how do you know that you're getting into the cardio zone?

A lot of the monitors that you can wear, either the rings or the wristwatches, any of those types of monitors can certainly measure your heart rate. Sometimes, depending on what kind of gym you're in, if you are holding onto handrails or things that can be sensors on there as well, that can monitor your heart rate and give you that information back in real time. You can also track your heart rate the old-fashioned way.

by finding your pulse and counting the number of beats per minute. You'll place two fingertips along the side of your neck next to your windpipe until you feel your artery pulsating. Set a timer for 60 seconds and count the number of beats. That tells you your current heart rate, how fast your heart is beating. Takeaway two, you'll use your heart rate to figure out how intensely you're exercising and whether you're pushing yourself hard enough or maybe too hard.

Your maximum heart rate is an upper limit. It's the estimated highest number of beats per minute that your heart can safely handle. And you can calculate it with a simple formula. So it's really 220, number 220, minus your age.

So if you're 30 years old, your maximum heart rate would be 190. It's 220 minus 30. Okay. If you're 50, it would be 220 minus 50. So your maximum heart rate would be 170. Okay.

But you're not actually aiming for that heart rate when you work out. Instead, you want to aim for your target rate, which is about 50 to 85 percent of your max heart rate. So again, taking that example of the person who's 30 years old and we're taking 220 minus 30, that gives you 190.

And then you take about 85% of that. So it can be 50 to 85%, not an exact science. The lower end of that range would be considered moderate intensity exercise. And the higher end would be vigorous exercise. So that's like the...

That's your sweet spot for cardio? That's the sweet spot for cardio. Again, when we're talking about cardio, we're talking about really exercising until the point that your heart is really, really pumping. And we have to remember that our hearts are made of...

of the same kind of muscle that's in our legs and in our arms. So when you are getting exercise, you're actually exercising your heart as well. That's why the heart is called a muscle. So what sorts of things can get your heart rate up to that target zone for cardio? Oh my gosh, any number of things. So

You know, you can pick whatever you think. So swimming, biking, hiking, running, tennis, any number of things can really get your heart rate up. And that's why I often say pick an activity that you like and do it. So generally what we say is if you're having difficulty speaking while you're doing the exercise, that's what cardio is.

What about walking? Like how fast really do you have to walk to be actually getting cardio? So here's the thing about walking. Any pace of walking that you do provides some cardiovascular benefit and decreases your risk of stroke. However, we have found that the faster your pace...

the more you're able to decrease your cardiovascular risk. So the baseline is anything is good. So walking, I think, is excellent. Everyone can do it at their own pace. You can do it alone. You can do it in pairs. You can do it in groups. You can walk fast. You can walk slow. But whatever you're doing, you will get cardio benefit from it. I am a really big fan of walking.

Takeaway three, lots of things can be considered cardio. Walking to the subway, doing yard work, chasing your kids around, going up the stairs, dancing, hiking, jogging, roller skating, basically anything that gets your heart pumping and into that target heart rate zone.

How high your heart rate goes during these activities will depend on your body and your conditioning. Now, you don't necessarily have to measure your heart rate every time you do one of these activities. You can get a baseline, and then maybe you check in every few months to see if that's changed. Let's talk more about the benefits of cardio. Why should we be doing this? Why should we be really working out the muscle of our heart and getting it pumping more quickly, regularly? Exercise is the prevention tool for

to decrease long-term heart disease. It decreases your weight, keeps your weight down, keeps your blood pressure lower, helps you in management of diabetes, helps to improve sleep quality. I speak about this a lot, the benefits of long-term exercise. You do not have to push yourself to exhaustion every day, but you must get up and do something. What is it about exercise and cardio specifically that is so good for the heart?

We can develop plaques along the arteries of our heart. And these plaques, if they get big enough, can block the artery and stop the blood flow to the heart, which means there's no oxygen getting to the heart. And that's what we call a heart attack. So that part of your heart would be under stress. And if you don't get medical attention quickly, it would die. Exercising decreases

the likelihood that those types of plaques will develop because it burns calories, burns cholesterol. Those plaques are built by cholesterol primarily and platelets. And so we can decrease those plaques, that atherosclerosis that tends to stud the arteries of our heart and cause those slow heart attacks.

Takeaway four, cardio is crucial to heart health. And if you can keep your heart healthy, that means you can keep up with other important activities that help with your longevity. If you can keep your body in motion and keep moving and working, certainly with cardio, especially it adds to longevity. It also adds to your quality of life.

By the way, Dr. Morgan says if you're trying to get 30 minutes of exercise in a day, you don't need to do it all in one go. You can try something called exercise snacking instead. So three or four times a day, take a five or 10 minute break and just do some type of exercise, even if it's going up and down the stairs or doing some deep knee bends or walking around the block. Those are called exercise snacks. And that shows long term that that increases your metabolism and also contributes to longevity.

That was cardiologist Dr. Jane Morgan. All right, it's time for a recap. Takeaway one, cardio is about getting your heart pumping. You don't necessarily need to hit your limit every time you do it. Takeaway two, you can use your heart rate to monitor your cardio intensity. To calculate your max heart rate, take the number 220 and subtract your age. Then aim for 50 to 85% of that number when you're working out.

Takeaway three, lots of things count as cardio. Jumping rope, speed walking, dancing. Find the movement that gets your heart rate up. And takeaway four, cardio is a great way to lower your risk of heart disease. And it can also help you stay healthy and vibrant so you can do other activities that help you live longer. ♪

For more Life Kit, check out our other episodes. We have one on how to lift weights and another on hydration. You can find those at npr.org slash life kit. And if you love Life Kit and you just cannot get enough, subscribe to our newsletter at npr.org slash life kit newsletter. Also, we love hearing from you. So if you have episode ideas or feedback you want to share, email us at lifekit at npr.org.

This episode of LifeKit was produced by Claire Marie Schneider. Our visuals editor is Beck Harlan, and our digital editor is Malika Gareeb. Megan Cain is our supervising editor, and Beth Donovan is our executive producer. Our production team also includes Andy Tegel, Margaret Serino, and Sylvie Douglas. Engineering support comes from James Willits and Becky Brown. Special thanks to Christopher Tenayan and Evelina Graver. I'm Mariel Cigarra. Thanks for listening.

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