The Atlantic City Weekly Health Wellness
Posted: March 5, 2012 at 7:43 am
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The Atlantic City Weekly Health Wellness
Health and Fitness: Use It Or Lose It
Posted: at 7:43 am
I shamefully write this column after a couple of weeks of being on hiatus. My apologies. I certainly wish that I could use an excuse like I had no access to the internet! Or, I was away on vacation. But sadly, I cannot. The reason why I have not been faithful to this column lately is the simple fact that I was busy and didn't have time. Or, in simpler terms (and probably more the truth) I did not make time. Work was excruciatingly busy, and by the time I got home, tried to squeeze a run in, eat some dinner, shower, my body was fried, and the creative juices weren't flowing. This is often the same excuse that people use when they don't make time to work out, or take care of their bodies. Now I get why moms and dads don't have the energy or really the time to make it to an exercise class. I also get why some of my colleagues at school who worked part time didn't have time to make it to that 5:30 yoga class.
It got me thinking of routines and falling out of habits; whether it is exercise or things such as taking time at the end of the day to read a book, or call your grandmother. Once something becomes routine, it become engrained in our daily timetable, and there are no questions necessary. But sometimes, you fall out of a routine and your discipline slips. You don't call grandmas as often. You don't cut the grass every Saturday, and in my case, your weekly column, doesn't come out as "weekly "as it should. So what happens to our bodies when we stop out exercise routine? Well, this is what I looked into this week.
Unfortunately, it's a sad but true fact that to maintain your hard-earned workout results, you have to continually exercise regularly. It's not like earning interest on money in the bank where gains are made by doing nothing. We are like a can of pop; let us sit and we lose our fizz. Sorry for the bad metaphors.
I read that in "fitness parlance," this is called the reversibility principle. Basically -- use it or lose it. It can also be called detraining. Detraining or the technical term for cessation of exercise is also a problem for athletes who get injured.
There are many fallacies about what happens to the body when an athlete stops exercising. The most common is that the muscles turn into fat. Apparently, this is impossible because muscle cells are completely different from fat cells. What really happens is that muscle cells become smaller, or atrophy and fat cells become bigger. Too much chocolate cake versus the seven minute mile!
A main effect when you stop exercising is going to be a change in stamina. Cardiovascular benefits will be lost due to detraining. But the good news is that people with a high level of aerobic endurance can retain many of the benefits for a longer period.
Dr. Robert Moffat of the Florida State University and Dr. Randall Wilbur of the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs preformed some studies to test endurance rates amongst athletes. The highly trained athletes showed a rapid drop in aerobic endurance in the first three weeks of detraining but the decline was less rapid in the following weeks. The scientists were surprised by both the rapid initial drop but also by the fact that a significant amount of endurance was retained even after 12 weeks of detraining. Whether this was due to a cumulative effect of high fitness levels, or a genetic factor, is uncertain.
Dr. Edward Coyle from the University of Texas, a leading researcher in the area of detraining, found that muscular strength will return to pre-exercise levels after only four to 12 weeks of detraining. Muscle size is also reduced. This is why many people notice a particular "sag" to their bodies after a few weeks of not exercising.
After about two to three months of doing nothing you will lose at least half your aerobic fitness because your lungs lose elasticity, your blood vessels shrink, your blood volume drops, you use oxygen less efficiently, and your heart pumps less blood per beat. Wow. Is that all? Please note my sarcastic tone.
But I was the most disheartened to find out the fact that your muscles significantly lose strength and fade after just 72 hours of no exercise! What?
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Health and Fitness: Use It Or Lose It
Clinical experts offer pregnancy and new mum tips in free seminar
Posted: at 7:43 am
Pre and post-natal women will be given expert advice on how to achieve peak health and fitness during a coffee morning hosted in South West London by Pure Sports Medicine.
(PRWEB UK) 5 March 2012
The Pure Sports Medicine team work with elite athletes, but their medical, nutritional and physiological expertise extends beyond sport. This expertise is just as applicable to a mum-to-be as it is an Olympic hopeful: while the purpose is obviously very different, both are seeking to be in optimal condition, and similar evidence-based principles can be applied.
Held at Pure Sports Medicines Raynes Park clinic based at David Lloyd Leisure in Bushey Road, the seminar will take place on Tuesday 13th March from 12.30pm -1.15pm. The session will be hosted by clinical experts who are able to answer questions and give professional advice to both expecting and new mothers about how to achieve maximum health and fitness.
The seminar will cover the following topics:
Drinks and snacks will be provided and babies are very welcome!
To register call 0208 540 7266 or email reception.raynespark(at)puresportsmed(dot)com
Note to editors:
For further information contact:
Pure Sports Medicine: David Adams, telephone: 07917 272 003
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Clinical experts offer pregnancy and new mum tips in free seminar
Retirement 101 With Jean Chatzky – Video
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Retirement 101 With Jean Chatzky - Video
Jason Varitek Announces Retirement – Video
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Jason Varitek Announces Retirement - Video
Snowe retirement a blow to Senate's 'sensible center'
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Sen. Snowe explains why leaving Congress
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
CNN LIVE: Go to CNNPolitics.com and CNN Mobile for the CNN Election Roundtable, a live video chat hosted by Wolf Blitzer and the CNN political team, Tuesday at 12 p.m. ET. Then tune in this week for live coverage of the Super Tuesday primaries and follow real-time results on CNNPolitics.com, on the CNN apps and on the CNN mobile web site. Follow CNN Politics on Facebook and on Twitter at #cnnelections.
Washington (CNN) -- When Republican Sen. Olympia Snowe of Maine rocked the political world with her announcement that she would not seek a fourth term in the Senate, she was forthright in expressing her frustration with "an atmosphere of polarization" in politics.
But for all her transparency, it was one of Snowe's Senate colleagues who perhaps best summed up her motivation for deciding to end her decades-long tenure on Capitol Hill.
"I think she lost hope," Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-South Carolina, told CNN.
Graham, who like Snowe had participated in bipartisan efforts to find compromise on hot-button issues, added, "You know, all of us need to believe there is a light at the end of the tunnel. If you lose that belief, why do you spend seven years of your life -- which in her case would have been her commitment -- to do something that there seems no hope."
Citing partisanship, Snowe makes surprising exit
Snowe is the latest in a string of centrist senators to announce that they will not seek re-election in the fall.
Late last year, Sen. Ben Nelson, a conservative Democrat from Nebraska, announced that he would not seek re-election in 2012. In a statement announcing his decision, Nelson called for "those who will follow in my footsteps to look for common ground and to work together in bipartisan ways to do what's best for the country, not just one political party."
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Snowe retirement a blow to Senate's 'sensible center'
4 percent retirement withdrawal rule still holds true – Sun, 04 Mar 2012 PST
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March 4, 2012 in Business
Dave Carpenter
Avoiding the nightmare financial scenario in retirement running out of money is gettingtrickier.
Rising life expectancy means having to pay for a longer retirement. The lack of a pension or frozen benefits translate to fewer, smaller checks from ex-employers. And the days of being able to count on averaging 10 percent annual returns from the stock market areover.
All that makes it even more important for retirees to know just how much they can take out of their portfolios every year without drawing them down toofast.
There isnt one model that fits all. It depends on individual circumstances, best reviewed with a financialadviser.
But the classic guideline long followed by many, and still respected, is widely known as the 4 percent rule. It holds that if you withdraw no more than 4 percent from your savings the first year of retirement and adjust the amount upward for inflation every year, you can be confident you wont run out of money during a 30-yearretirement.
The strategy is credited to financial planner William Bengen, who published his research in the Journal of Financial Planning in1994.
The twist is this: The father of the 4 percent rule says the complete number is actually 4.5percent.
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4 percent retirement withdrawal rule still holds true - Sun, 04 Mar 2012 PST
The Single BEST Abs Exercise (Scientifically Proven) – Video
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The Single BEST Abs Exercise (Scientifically Proven) - Video
Lee Hord, Head Elephant Hunter, Interviewed at the 2012 Healthy Living Expo – Video
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Lee Hord, Head Elephant Hunter, Interviewed at the 2012 Healthy Living Expo - Video
Simpson’s personal best lands her silver
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BATHURST swimmer Jodie Simson has continued her golden run of recent form, grabbing three top 10 finishes at the recent NSW Country Championships.
Competing at the Sydney Olympic Park Aquatic Centre where she has raced plenty of times of late, Simson snared a silver medal in the 50 metres breaststroke her pet event and set a personal best in doing so.
She completed the one lap dash in 34.28 seconds to claim a podium finish in the 15 and over division. She defeated 59 other hopefuls.
She followed that with a ninth place in the 100m, again setting a new best mark with a 1.17.36.
That time was good enough to qualify her for the 100m at the Australian Championships to be held in Adelaide later this month, where she has already qualified for the 50m.
In her final and most gruelling event, the 200m breaststroke, she recorded a 2.47.39, good enough for sixth in the final and once more, a personal best.
Simsons performance comes on the back of her recent appearance at the NSW State Open Championships where she placed 32nd in the 50m.
The second placing was obviously a highlight, but also the fact that she swum a PB in all of her events was fantastic, Jodies dad Charlie Simson said. Shes qualified for the 100m in Adelaide now and shes absolutely worked her bum off to get there.
She didnt expect to finish that high up in the 50m, she was over the moon to find herself on the podium.
The teenager will now set her sights on a good finish at the nationals and her workload has increased of late accordingly in preparation.
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Simpson’s personal best lands her silver