05 de Dezembro, 2009
Fraca flexibilidade do tronco associada a problemas arteriais, ou como para contrariar isto você poderia, pelo menos aos fins-de-semana, começar a fazer o mesmo que este pessoal do Bootcamp Portugal
Este pessoal do Bootcamp Portugal, que eu já vi muitas vezes pelo Estádio Nacional, é muito naquela linha do exército americano, "We Kill More People Before 9 a.m. Than Most Countries Do All Day", mas no que respeita a exercício, pois claro. Gosto do conceito em geral, e não há dúvida que esta coisa, da flexibilidade e dos exercícios de força, faz bem às artérias!
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2009 Oct;297(4):H1314-8. Epub 2009 Aug 7.
Poor trunk flexibility is associated with arterial stiffening. (pdf)
Yamamoto K, Kawano H, Gando Y, Iemitsu M, Murakami H, Sanada K, Tanimoto M, Ohmori Y, Higuchi M, Tabata I, Miyachi M.
Health Promotion and Exercise Program, National Institute of Health and Nutrition, Tokyo, Japan.Flexibility is one of the components of physical fitness as well as cardiorespiratory fitness and muscular strength and endurance. Flexibility has long been considered a major component in the preventive treatment of musculotendinous strains. The present study investigated a new aspect of flexibility. Using a cross-sectional study design, we tested the hypothesis that a less flexible body would have arterial stiffening. A total of 526 adults, 20 to 39 yr of age (young), 40 to 59 yr of age (middle-aged), and 60 to 83 yr of age (older), participated in this study. Subjects in each age category were divided into either poor- or high-flexibility groups on the basis of a sit-and-reach test. Arterial stiffness was assessed by brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity (baPWV). Two-way ANOVA indicated a significant interaction between age and flexibility in determining baPWV (P < 0.01). In middle-aged and older subjects, baPWV was higher in poor-flexibility than in high-flexibility groups (middle-aged, 1,260 +/- 141 vs. 1,200 +/- 124 cm/s, P < 0.01; and older, 1,485 +/- 224 vs. 1,384 +/- 199 cm/s, P < 0.01). In young subjects, there was no significant difference between the two flexibility groups. A stepwise multiple-regression analysis (n = 316) revealed that among the components of fitness (cardiorespiratory fitness, muscular strength, and flexibility) and age, all components and age were independent correlates of baPWV. These findings suggest that flexibility may be a predictor of arterial stiffening, independent of other components of fitness.