City
Epaper

Australian study links short bursts of physical activity to lower cardiovascular risk in women

By IANS | Updated: December 4, 2024 21:05 IST

Sydney, Dec 4 An Australian research has found that short daily bursts of intense physical activity could reduce ...

Open in App

Sydney, Dec 4 An Australian research has found that short daily bursts of intense physical activity could reduce the risk of major cardiovascular events among middle-aged women by almost half.

The research, which was published on Wednesday by the University of Sydney, found that an average of four minutes of vigorous intermittent lifestyle physical activity (VILPA) a day significantly reduces the risk of major cardiovascular events, including heart attacks, for middle aged women, Xinhua news agency reported.

It found that women aged 40-79 who did not engage in regular structured exercise but averaged 3.4 minutes of VILPA daily were 45 per cent less likely to experience a major cardiovascular event than those who did no VILPA.

Emmanuel Stamatakis, lead author of the study, said that daily incidental vigorous activity completed in short bursts lasting up to one minute was shown to improve heart health outcomes in middle-aged women.

"Making short bursts of vigorous physical activity a lifestyle habit could be a promising option for women who are not keen on structured exercise or are unable to do it for any reason," he said in a media release.

"As a starting point, it could be as simple as incorporating throughout the day a few minutes of activities like stair climbing, carrying shopping, uphill walking, playing tag with a child or pet, or either uphill or power walking."

The study drew on data from 22,368 participants in the United Kingdom (UK) Biobank study who wore physical activity trackers between 2013 and 2015.

Cardiovascular health was monitored through hospital and mortality records until November 2022.

Female participants who averaged 3.4 minutes of VILPA daily were 51 per cent less likely to suffer a heart attack and 67 per cent less likely to develop heart failure than those who did no VILPA.

A minimum of 1.2 minutes of VILPA per day was associated with a 30 per cent lower risk of total major cardiovascular events, a 33 per cent lower risk of heart attack, and a 40 per cent lower risk of heart failure.

Men were found to experience fewer health benefits from VILPA. Those who averaged 5.6 minutes daily were only 16 per cent less likely to experience a major cardiovascular event than those who did none.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalManipur suspends internet in 5 districts after bomb attack, CM reviews security situation

NationalNo dryout reported in LPG distributor ships, all petrol pumps operating normally: Govt

NationalDelhi Crime Branch busts South-East gang, arrests kingpin

InternationalUS Navy jets launch from USS Abraham Lincoln during Operation Epic Fury: CENTCOM

NationalCongress confident of decisive UDF victory in Kerala amid strong anti-incumbency: Shashi Tharoor

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyPre-bid conference for Rs 7,280-crore rare earth manufacturing scheme conducted, 25 firms join

TechnologyBank of Baroda rolls out multilingual AI platform ‘bob SAMVAD’ across 22 languages

TechnologyLG Energy Solution turns to operating loss in Q1 amid Mideast crisis

TechnologySouth Africa sees upcoming summit as platform to bolster economic ties with India

TechnologyFood PLI scheme attracts Rs 9,207 crore investment, creates 3.29 lakh jobs