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cover of episode Why you should take a 'fart walk' after a meal

Why you should take a 'fart walk' after a meal

2024/12/12
logo of podcast Life Kit: Health

Life Kit: Health

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Maria Godoy: 饭后散步,特别是被称为“放屁散步”的活动,对健康有很多益处,例如缓解胀气、促进消化、调节血糖、改善睡眠等。促进消化可以帮助肠道微生物利用膳食纤维产生有益物质,从而维护大脑、免疫系统和新陈代谢的健康。饭后散步有助于调节血糖,避免血糖过高带来的血管损伤和相关疾病风险。运动可以帮助肌肉吸收血液中的葡萄糖,从而降低血糖水平。饭后散步可以减少胰岛素分泌,降低患上糖尿病和糖尿病前期风险。即使是轻松的散步,也能带来显著的健康益处,例如促进消化和调节血糖。饭后散步时间不必过长,短短几分钟就能有效调节血糖,更长时间的散步效果更好。如果行动不便,也可以进行其他类型的运动,例如椅子操或简单的肢体活动,以获得类似的健康益处。即使在室内,也可以通过简单的运动,例如原地踏步或挥动手臂,来促进肌肉收缩和血糖调节。几分钟的饭后运动,即使是简单的运动,也能帮助身体调节血糖。饭后半小时内进行散步效果最佳,因为此时身体开始分解食物中的葡萄糖。晚餐后散步尤其重要,因为晚餐通常是每日最大的一餐。饭后散步可以促进消化,避免因胃部饱胀而影响睡眠。饭后散步有助于调节血糖,从而改善睡眠质量。饭后散步可以促进血液循环,放松身心,从而改善睡眠。 Chris Damon: 饭后散步可以促进消化,帮助未消化的营养物质到达肠道微生物,从而促进肠道健康。更快地消化也有助于将更多的纤维和其他未消化的营养物质输送到我们下肠道中生存的微生物中,这样它们就可以以这些营养物质为食。特别是如果你吃的是富含纤维的食物,这些微生物会利用这些纤维来产生有助于保持我们大脑、免疫系统甚至新陈代谢健康的分子,这意味着,你知道,一个健康的微生物组。 Loretta DiPietro: 如果行动不便,也可以进行其他类型的运动,例如椅子操或简单的肢体活动,以获得类似的健康益处。即使在室内,也可以通过简单的运动,例如原地踏步或挥动手臂,来促进肌肉收缩和血糖调节。 Luis Bonavere: 饭后散步有助于调节血糖,从而改善睡眠质量。血糖的波动会导致睡眠质量下降,而散步可以改善胰岛素敏感性,从而促进更稳定的能量水平,改善睡眠。温和的饭后散步还可以改善血液循环,促进放松感,从而帮助你睡得更好。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

What are the health benefits of taking a 'fart walk' after a meal?

Post-meal walks, or 'fart walks,' improve digestion, relieve gas, regulate blood sugar levels, and support a healthy gut microbiome. They also help lower the risk of prediabetes and diabetes by reducing blood sugar spikes.

Why does walking after eating help regulate blood sugar?

Walking after eating helps muscles absorb glucose from the bloodstream, reducing blood sugar spikes. This process occurs without relying solely on insulin, easing the pancreas's workload and lowering the risk of insulin resistance.

How long should a post-meal walk be to see benefits?

Even a short walk of two to five minutes can help regulate blood sugar, though longer walks, such as 15 minutes, provide more significant benefits. Casual walking at a moderate pace is sufficient for digestion and blood sugar regulation.

What are alternatives to walking for people with mobility restrictions?

Chair aerobics, arm pumping, light upper body resistance training, or marching in place can provide similar benefits to walking. The key is to engage muscles to help absorb glucose and aid digestion.

When is the best time to take a post-meal walk?

The optimal time is within 30 minutes after eating, as this is when glucose from the meal enters the bloodstream. Walking after dinner is particularly beneficial, as it is often the largest meal of the day.

How does a post-meal walk improve sleep?

Walking after dinner jumpstarts digestion, prevents discomfort from a full stomach, and regulates blood sugar levels, which can lead to more stable energy and better sleep. It also promotes relaxation and improves circulation.

Chapters
The term 'fart walk' refers to the act of taking a walk after a meal. This practice offers several health benefits, including improved digestion, better blood sugar regulation, and a healthier gut microbiome due to increased fiber and nutrient availability for gut microbes.
  • Walking after meals aids digestion.
  • It improves blood sugar levels.
  • It promotes a healthy gut microbiome.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
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This message comes from Discover. Know what's a myth? Self-care isn't for everyone. What's not a myth? Discover is accepted at 99% of places that take credit cards nationwide. Based on the February 2024 Nielsen Report. Discover.com slash credit card. You're listening to Life Kit from NPR. Hey everybody, it's Marielle.

Today's a shorty episode with a simple tip that costs nothing, takes very little time, and is hugely beneficial for your body. Taking a walk or doing some kind of movement after you eat. Going for a fart walk after dinner is something that's going to help you age wonder. You know what type of walk it is, right? You got to say it. What type of walk it is? A-R-T. What do you got to say for yourself? On my fart walk.

If you're on TikTok, you may have seen people suggesting this. It turns out the science is solid here. NPR science and health correspondent Maria Godoy has been reporting on this. And on this episode of Life Kit, she tells us why moving after a meal is good for us and how to go about it specifically. Seriously, it doesn't take much effort and it is a great habit to get into. ♪

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I heard of this concept of walking after eating a couple months ago, but I actually heard it referred to as something else. Help me out here. What are people calling this? Yeah, so they call it a fart walk. And yeah, I just said fart walk on NPR. Yeah, thank you for doing that. I could not. Yeah, I take the hits for you. What it means is just, well, we know that walking is always good for you, but you do get specific benefits if you do it after eating. And one of them is that, yes, it can indeed relieve gas.

But not only that, it can actually jumpstart digestion. I talked to Chris Damon. He's a gastroenterologist and microbiome researcher at the University of Washington. This is what he told me. It actually has pretty important benefits for your well-being in your belly, so to speak, getting things moving and maybe also beneficial for clearing the air, if you know what I mean.

We know what he means. Exactly. So Dr. Damon says faster digestion has another important benefit. It can also get more fiber and other undigested nutrients to the microbes that live in our lower gut so that they can feast on them. And especially if you eat a fiber-rich diet.

diet, these microbes will use that fiber to produce molecules that help keep our brains, our immune systems, and even our metabolisms healthy, which means, you know, a healthy microbiome. And as past listeners of Life Kit might know, I'm obsessed with a healthy microbiome and fiber.

Yeah, this seems like a pretty easy way to do something good for your gut. It is, but there are other benefits. And one of the biggest has to do with regulating our blood sugar. And you want to do that for a couple of reasons. So for starters, blood sugar levels can really influence our energy levels throughout the day and just like how we feel. But the other thing is if you have chronically high blood sugar, that can damage your blood vessels over time. And that can lead to complications with things like your heart, your kidneys, even your

Yeah, it's not a good thing. But to get those blood sugar benefits, you want to walk specifically after eating. And the reason has to do with what happens during digestion, right?

So when you digest your food, your body will break down carbohydrates in your meal into glucose, which is a sugar. And so that sugar will flood your bloodstream. But if you walk after eating, it can help blunt that spike in blood sugar. Here's Chris Damon again. When we move our muscles, they become sponges for the blood glucose that our gut is absorbing into the bloodstream.

And so it basically just pulls all that glucose out of the blood and into the muscles. And so what happens is we end up using that sugar right away to fuel our walk.

But don't most people have a built-in way of doing this? I thought that was what insulin was for, to clear blood sugar. Yeah, that is exactly what insulin does. It's a hormone that clears glucose out of the blood and into nearby cells. But the cool thing is that when you contract your muscles through walking, they also do this. They clear that blood sugar even without any insulin present.

What that means is that our bodies don't have to produce as much insulin, and that's good because then your pancreas doesn't have to work as hard to make insulin. And over time, that can lower your risk of prediabetes and diabetes. Okay, so you're kind of helping your body out with this one. Yeah, absolutely. All right, takeaway one, post-meal walk can jumpstart your digestion, and it'll help regulate your blood sugar, lowering your risk of prediabetes and diabetes over time.

How fast do you need to walk to get these benefits? You know, it depends on what your goals are in terms of helping digestion and regulating blood sugar. You really get a lot of bang for your buck with just nice casual walks after dinner. Like I'm talking about the speed you might walk your dog.

And that's enough to get your muscles moving and sucking up all that blood sugar. Now, if you also want to boost your cardiovascular health, then yeah, you have to pick up the pace. So make it like a brisk walk, you know, but it really does do something for you, especially if you time it after a meal. And any word on how long we should be doing this to get the gut and blood sugar benefits?

It's really not long at all. There's research that shows just two to five minutes can help regulate your blood sugar after a meal, although longer is better. There was one study that found that taking a 15-minute walk at a moderate pace after eating helped regulate blood sugar levels even faster.

many hours later. But if you don't have time for that 15-minute walk or 30-minute walk, that really shouldn't stop you from doing the five-minute walk after eating because it's still going to be good for you. It's really doing something good for your body. Okay.

Now, what if you can't walk, you have mobility restrictions? Are there other kinds of movements that'll give you similar benefits? Yeah, it's really all about getting those muscles contracting. So if you can't walk for whatever reason, you can do things like chair aerobics or pump your arms up and down or even some like light upper body resistance training in a chair.

I talked to Loretta DiPietro. She's an exercise and nutrition researcher at the George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health. And she has studied post-meal walks. And she says it doesn't have to be complicated at all. Like even right now when it's getting dark out earlier and it's cold, you might not want to go outside.

DiPietro says just moving indoors can help if you can do it. When you're watching television, stand up during commercials and march in place. Wave your arms and legs, walk upstairs. Those muscle contractions will help store the glucose. You know, if you have the mobility, you can also just do jumping jacks. Really, the goal is just to move those muscles after a meal.

Takeaway two, it doesn't take much. Just a few minutes of post-meal casual walking can help your body regulate blood sugar. And if you can't walk for whatever reason, other kinds of muscle movement will help too.

Let's talk about timing. Is there a specific amount of time you should wait after eating to do all this? Yeah, that's a really good question. And you want to do it within about half hour after putting your fork down. Your body will have started breaking down your food into glucose and other things. And so you want to be moving as that glucose hits your bloodstream so your muscles can use it up right away.

Loretta DiPietro told me that you can do this after any meal, but if you had to pick one, dinner is going to be your best bet. And that's because for a lot of us, it tends to be the biggest meal of the day. And so you've got a lot of calories going in and all that sugar and fat is circulating in your blood. And what we then do is flop in front of the television or we go to bed. A walk can counteract that.

And the other thing to note is that a moderate walk after eating can also just help you sleep better. Why is that? Well, part of it has to do with not going to bed with a full stomach, right? Which can be really uncomfortable. I don't know if you've ever done it. But, you know, as I mentioned before, walking jumpstarts digestion. So basically it gets your GI tract moving. It starts the process of

Getting that food broken down, it's actually interesting because that's part of the reason why when you have like abdominal surgery, they make sure that you walk before you leave the hospital and that you have a bowel movement. The walking jumpstarts that bowel movement and gets you going. So walking really does have that role of starting that whole digestion process.

But the other part has to do with regulating your blood sugar, which we've been talking about. I talked to Luis Bonavere. He's a behavioral sleep specialist at Johns Hopkins University. And he told me that blood sugar spikes and crashes can lead to a bad night's sleep. Walking can help improve insulin sensitivity. And so that not only benefits your metabolism, but it can also promote more stable energy levels kind of throughout the night.

Bon Iver says a gentle walk after dinner can also improve circulation and promote the sense of relaxation, which can also help you sleep better. So it's like a win all around. Takeaway three, in terms of timing, aim to fit that walk in about half an hour or less after eating. It may also be most useful after dinner because that tends to be our biggest meal. Also, in general, walking can help you sleep better. So that's a bonus.

You know, it occurs to me, we've done episodes on moving as much as you can and taking these five minute breaks, just get up and move a little bit. And this idea of the post meal walk, it's just like another way to fit that movement in. You know, if you're going to get up and move throughout the day, time it after you've just eaten, then you'll get

Extra benefits. Exactly. Walking, moving is always a good idea. If you do it after eating, you're going to get extra benefits. And, you know, the other thing is we are entering full-on holiday season with lots of parties, lots of cookies and cakes, et cetera. Just keep in mind, this might be a good time to start that after-meal walk habit to help you process all that. And if anything, this whole conversation should just reinforce it doesn't have to be a heavy lift. Like literally march in place. You know, you're still doing something good for your body.

Yeah, I love that. You think you have to go out for a long run or train for a marathon or something, but you don't. Exactly. I mean, you can if you want, but you don't have to. All right, Maria, thank you so much. Oh, it's my pleasure. Okay, time for a recap. Walking after a meal can help your body digest and also clear blood sugar. You don't need to do much. If you only have time for a few minutes or some marches in place or arm raises, that'll still help.

Aim to do this within 30 minutes of eating, and it's most useful after your biggest meal of the day.

For more Life Kit, check out our other episodes. We've got one on the benefits of frequent five-minute walk breaks and another on how to start up a running routine. You can find those at npr.org slash life kit. And if you love Life Kit and want even more, 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 Margaret Serino. Our visuals editor is Beck Harlan, and our digital editor is Malika Gharib. Megan Cain is our supervising editor, and Beth Donovan is our executive producer. Our production team also includes Andy Tegel, Claire Marie Schneider, and Sylvie Douglas. Engineering support comes from Becky Brown, with fact-checking by Ida Porosad. I'm Mariel Seguera. Thanks for listening. ♪

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