Weight training can help with heart trouble: AHA
DALLAS (Reuters) - Have heart problems? Hit the gym and start lifting some weights.
While conventional wisdom once held that people with heart disease should not pump iron, a new scientific statement from the American Heart Association says some resistance training can be good for them.
"Just like we once learned that people with heart disease benefited from aerobic exercise, we are now learning that guided, moderate weight training also has significant benefits," said Mark Williams, professor of medicine at Creighton University School of Medicine in Omaha, Nebraska.
Weight training is seen as a complement to aerobic exercise, not a replacement, he said. But it provides everyday benefits.
"It helps people better perform tasks of daily living -- like lifting sacks of groceries," Williams said in a statement.
Resistance training is not recommended for people with certain conditions such as unstable heart disease, uncontrolled high blood pressure or heart rhythm disorders, infections in and around the heart, and some other serious problems.
The statement's recommendations for an initial weight-lifting program says resistance training should be performed:
-- in a rhythmical manner at a moderate-to-slow controlled speed;
-- through a full range of motion, avoiding breath-holding and straining by exhaling during the contraction or exertion phase of the lift and inhaling during the relaxation phase; Continued...








