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- $Unique_ID{BRK01304}
- $Pretitle{}
- $Title{Can Exercise Help Correct Breathlessness?}
- $Subject{breathless winded exercise respiratory system athletic endurance
- oxygen athletic heart lungs wind pulmonary systems lung breath breathe
- breathing exercises exercising activity activities}
- $Volume{H-5}
- $Log{Exercise Strengthens the Heart*0003202.scf
- Exercise Increases Lung Capacity*0003206.scf}
-
- Copyright (c) 1991-92,1993 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
-
-
- Can Exercise Help Correct Breathlessness?
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-
- QUESTION: Our apartment requires us to climb a single flight of steps. They
- are not overly steep, but as time has gone past, my husband has had more
- trouble reaching the top without being a bit breathless. His doctor has found
- nothing physically wrong, and claims that it is normal with advancing age.
- But some of our more athletic friends have no difficulty whatsoever. Does
- this mean that my spouse should get off his butt and begin moving it a bit?
- Can exercise help even at his age (he is 69)?
-
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-
- ANSWER: It may well indeed indicate that a bit of exercise can correct the
- problem, at any age. It is true that it is felt that with increasing age,
- endurance and the ability to utilize our oxygen intake may diminish, but with
- ever increasing numbers of citizens making it into the retirement years, new
- studies have shown that a bit of regular exercise can slow down the losses
- previously thought to be inevitable. There is a bit of a mental block though
- for many people who have not indulged in athletics during or through their
- lifetime, a block that fails to consider that a brisk walk may be all that is
- needed to get on the right "track" (I just couldn't resist the pun). It
- doesn't require participation in an athletic sport, but merely a regularly
- scheduled activity that gets the heart to beating a bit more rapidly than
- usual, and a duration of 30 minutes or better. You may be the key to the
- solution if you are inclined to accompany your "spouse," for it is much more
- rewarding and fun when done with someelse along. Start a diary, and keep
- track of the time spent each week in your exercise walk. You can plan walks
- into new areas, making it a bit of an adventure, or include it as part of
- other routine activities, such as food shopping. Besides the benefit to heart
- and lungs, these extra activities can burn extra calories, and either help
- shed unneeded extra weight, or keep off unwanted pounds. You see, it isn't
- "exercise" that seems to be the needed solution here, but a bit of extra
- physical "activity". Once you embrace that philosophy, you will many ways of
- adding a little extra healthful occupations that help get the "wind" back into
- older lungs.
-
- ----------------
-
- The material contained here is "FOR INFORMATION ONLY" and should not replace
- the counsel and advice of your personal physician. Promptly consulting your
- doctor is the best path to a quick and successful resolution of any medical
- problem.
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-