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Old Thu, Aug-16-01, 06:35
fern2340's Avatar
fern2340 fern2340 is offline
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Default What jogging does to your body

What jogging does to your body
by PETA BEE, Daily Mail

More than one million people in Britain go jogging regularly. But should they be put off by reports that it may not be as good for our health as we think? Scientists are claiming it causes premature wrinkles and is almost as harmful to the skin as the sun and smoking. So do your trainers hold the key to fitness or physical ruin?

The heart
REports that jogging can cause heart attacks are unfounded, according to cardiologist Dr Dan Tunstall Pedoe, the medical director of the Flora London Marathon.

'More than 400,000 people have run the London Marathon since 1981, but there have been only five deaths in that time,' he says. 'And the people who died had severe heart disease, so they were already at risk.'

In fact, says Dr Tunstall Pedoe, running is more likely to extend most people's lives.

Studies have shown that regular running can cut your risk of heart disease by 50 per cent and, over time, it will strengthen the cardiovascular system, improving circulation and enabling your heart and lungs to work more efficiently.

According to the British Heart Foundation, around 10,000 deaths from heart attacks could be prevented each year if people kept themselves fitter with regular aerobic activities such as jogging.

The bones
Running is one of the most high-impact of activities. With each stride, you take a shock equivalent to up to five times your body weight reverberating up your legs and into your spine.

By the time they cross the finish line in a marathon, the average runner will be about one centimetre shorter than when they started. Repetitive pounding causes muscles to tighten and vertebrae to compress.

This shrinkage is temporary and most runners will be back to their normal height the next morning. And it is not all bad news.

According to the National Osteoporosis Society, the weight-bearing effect of running makes it one of the best bone-strengthening activities around.

The lungs
The lungs work considerably harder than usual when you run. A person generally uses ten times the oxygen they would need when sitting in front of the television for the same period.

Over time, regular jogging will strengthen the cardiovascular system, enabling your heart and lungs to work more efficiently. This means you can do more exercise for less effort.

Weight


Run at a manageable pace of ten minutes per mile and you will burn an average 4.2 calories per hour for every pound of your body weight (that is 588 calories per hour if you weigh 10st). That's more than you'd use swimming a slow front crawl or cycling at six minutes per mile.

As you get fitter and incorporate faster, higher-intensity bursts of running, these fat-burning effects will be even greater.

During one hour of running, you can expect to lose around one litre of fluid through sweat. Muscles generate about 20 times more heat when doing exercise than when they are inactive, and fluid acts as an essential internal cooling mechanism.

Metabolism
Sports physiologists have found that the body's metabolic rate - the efficiency with which it burns calories and fat - is raised not only during a run, but for several hours afterwards.

'Even after running for 20 minutes or half-an-hour, you could be burning a higher amount of total calories for a few hours after you stop,' says sports physiologist, Mark Simpson, of Loughborough University's School of Sports Science.

As you get fitter, the benefits are more profound. One recent study showed that runners who incorporated fast sprints into their workout burned three-and-a-half times more body fat than those who walked or jogged very slowly.
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