7 Amazing Health Benefits of Exercise

Muhammad Naser Khan
5 min readFeb 27, 2022
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You have a strong perception that exercise is beneficial to your health and that it is “heart-healthy.” According to The TIME cover article “The Exercise Cure”, Americans engage in 150 minutes of strength and cardiovascular physical activity per week, more than half of all parents of many children do not exercise at all, and 80.2 million Americans over the age of 6 are entirely sedentary. If you act like the rest of the population, you will remain unmotivated.

Exercise has a medical benefit, according to scientists. According to Claude Bouchard, no medicine can replace the efficacy of exercise, and even if one could, it would be prohibitively expensive. That is unfortunate news, but a new study demonstrates that there are numerous compelling reasons for people of all ages, even the sick and pregnant, to begin moving.

  1. Physical activity is beneficial to one’s mental health.
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Reduced depression, enhanced memory, and faster learning have all been linked. Exercise looks to be the most effective way to prevent or delay the onset of Alzheimer’s disease, which is a significant concern for many people in the United States.

Scientists are not sure why exercise affects brain structure and function, but it is a hot issue. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is a protein in the brain and spinal cord encoded by the BDNF gene.

2. you may get joyful.

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For decades, we have almost solely concentrated on the physical benefits of exercise, ignoring the psychological and emotional benefits of regular physical activity,” says Cedric Bryant, chief science officer of the American Council on Exercise. Several studies have shown that various sorts of exercise, ranging from walking to cycling, can improve people’s feelings and even treat depressive symptoms. When you exercise, you can release tension. Serotonin, norepinephrine, endorphins, and dopamine are brain chemicals that help pain relief, mood improvement, and relaxation.

3. It has the potential to slow down the aging process.

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Telomeres — the protective caps on the ends of chromosomes — get shorter as people age and their cells cycle more frequently. According to a small new study, moderate-intensity exercise may help cells age more slowly. Researchers obtained a muscle biopsy and blood samples from 10 healthy persons before and after a 45-minute ride on a stationary bicycle to see how exercise affects telomeres. According to the researchers, the activity increased levels of a substance that preserves telomeres, slowing their shortening. Physical activity has been shown to extend life by up to five years. As a result, it appears that exercise slows down the aging process at the cellular level.

4. It will improve your skin’s appearance.

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Aerobic exercise increases the flow of blood to the skin, providing oxygen and nutrients that aid wound healing and skin health. Your skin will generate more blood vessels and microscopic capillaries if you exercise for long enough. “That is why, when patients suffer injuries, they should begin exercising as soon as possible — not only to prevent muscle atrophy but also to keep blood flowing to the skin,” adds Anthony Hackney, an exercise physiologist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

According to Hackney, when you exercise, your muscles produce much heat, which you have to release into the environment to keep your body temperature from rising too high. Heat is carried from the muscle to the blood, then delivered to the skin, which can be released into the atmosphere. The skin also serves as a heat dissipation site.

5. Amazing things can happen in just a few minutes.

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According to new research, not much activity is required to get the benefits. “We have been interested in the question of, how low can you go?” says Martin Gibala, an exercise physiologist at McMaster University in Ontario. He intended to compare the effectiveness of a 10-minute workout to a regular 50-minute routine. In his micro-workout, three severe 20-second bursts of all-out, as-hard-as-you-can exertion are followed by brief recoveries. Over three months, he compared the short workout to the standard routine to see better. Even though one activity lasted five times longer than the other, both workouts improved cardiac function and blood sugar control in the same way. “If you are willing and able to push hard, you can get away with very little exercise,” Gibala says.

6. It can help you get back on your feet after a serious illness.

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Even really strenuous exercise, such as the interval sessions can help people with a variety of chronic conditions, including type 2 diabetes and heart failure. For decades, patients with specific conditions have been advised not to exercise. This is new thinking. Scientists now believe that a considerably broader proportion of people can and should engage in physical activity. According to a comprehensive study of more than 300 randomized trials, exercise proved even more effective than medication in helping patients recover from strokes.

Dr. Robert Sallis, a family physician at Kaiser Permanente Fontana Medical Center in California, has advised his patients to exercise since the early 1990s hoping to reduce drug use. He notes, “It did really well, particularly in my sickest patients.” “If I could simply encourage patients to do it on a daily basis — even just walking, anything that brought their heart rate up a little bit — I would see significant changes in their chronic disease, not to mention these other things like melancholy, anxiety, mood, and energy levels.”

7. Your fat cells will shrink in size.

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The body uses both carbohydrates and fats as energy sources. Continuous aerobic exercise training boosts the body’s ability to burn fat, which requires a lot of oxygen to turn into energy. Hackney says that exercise training develops and enhances our circulatory system’s ability to supply oxygen, allowing us to digest more fat as an energy source. The fat cells reduce, and inflammation diminishes. Fat cells produce chemicals that cause persistent low-grade inflammation.

Written by:

Muhammad Naser Khan

Muhammad Naser Khan is a Content writer from Pakistan. He is also a certified Graphic Designer and a Video Editor.

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Muhammad Naser Khan
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