The Dangers of Overexercising and How Antioxidants Can Help
Exercising is the closest thing we have to the fountain of youth, right? Every doctor and legitimate health care professional will tell you that no diet in the world is going to work unless you also exercise. Exercise is great! We should do it as
often as we can and as much as we can. If running an hour a day is good for you, then running two hours a day must be great for you. Right? Not necessarily. In fact, there is such a thing as too much exercise.
How can this be? How can something that everyone agrees is good for you turn out to be bad? Well, it all depends on how much you are doing. Do you run more than fifteen miles a week? Did you know that with each mile over that fifteen miles you are increasing your risk of muscle injury? The evidence put forward by years of visits to the doctor is difficult to debate. The incidence of chronic joint pain rises in direct correlation to how many more miles a person jogs or runs over fifteen in a given week. Indeed, overdoing it doesn’t just bring on excess pain, it can potentially result in much more serious problems such as knee surgery or hip replacement.
Running is an aerobic exercise, as you probably know. Aerobic exercise deals with oxygen production in the blood. But all that production is caused by chemical reactions taking place inside cells and often these chemical reactions result in production of what are known as free radicals. Free radicals are molecules that not only occur in pollution caused by such things as the exhaust from your car, but also during the metabolic process that takes place within your body. Free radicals are a naturally occurring molecule and the body can’t survive without them. Unfortunately, when too many free radicals flood your system, they can damage the cell’s DNA and cause harm to your immune system.
How can this be? How can something that everyone agrees is good for you turn out to be bad? Well, it all depends on how much you are doing. Do you run more than fifteen miles a week? Did you know that with each mile over that fifteen miles you are increasing your risk of muscle injury? The evidence put forward by years of visits to the doctor is difficult to debate. The incidence of chronic joint pain rises in direct correlation to how many more miles a person jogs or runs over fifteen in a given week. Indeed, overdoing it doesn’t just bring on excess pain, it can potentially result in much more serious problems such as knee surgery or hip replacement.
Running is an aerobic exercise, as you probably know. Aerobic exercise deals with oxygen production in the blood. But all that production is caused by chemical reactions taking place inside cells and often these chemical reactions result in production of what are known as free radicals. Free radicals are molecules that not only occur in pollution caused by such things as the exhaust from your car, but also during the metabolic process that takes place within your body. Free radicals are a naturally occurring molecule and the body can’t survive without them. Unfortunately, when too many free radicals flood your system, they can damage the cell’s DNA and cause harm to your immune system.
Related information
- Every mile you run a week over 15 miles increases your risk for developing chronic pain.
- Aerobic exercise increase the production of free radicals, which can your immune system..
- Antioxidants found in many foods serve as an army that engages in battle with free radicals.
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