Summary
A healthy amount of exercise not only restores energy and maintains your weight, it may also decrease menopausal symptoms like insomnia and hot flashes.
Original source:
http://www.latimes.com/features/health/fitness/la-he-menopause29aug29,1,2552801.story?coll=la-health-fitness-news
Details
- Bouché, an executive assistant at Nickelodeon Animation, is a testament to the power of exercise over menopausal symptoms.
- That link has been noted by fitness instructors and trainers who have seen the effect on the hot flashes, insomnia, joint aches and weight gain often accompanying this phase of a woman's life.
- But it's only now starting to get a closer look from researchers and from many women looking for natural ways to ease the symptoms of menopause.
- One analysis of 12 menopausal women in an eight-week strength training program found that 40% of the women felt less anxious and half had less aching, stiffness and irritability.
- Yet the prevailing wisdom is that exercise can be a benefit to some women who experience menopausal symptoms --- if not by actually reducing the frequency of hot flashes and other discomforts, then by generally improving their health.
- "We know that exercise improves quality of life, and if you translate that into any population you see improvements," says Alysia Mastrangelo, associate professor of physical therapy at the Richard Stockton College of New Jersey and lead author of the strength training and yoga studies.
- One study, published last year in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, followed 353 women through a four-year diet and exercise program and found it was able to slow the progression of menopause-related atherosclerosis.
- "The health benefits of exercise go far beyond management of menopause symptoms," says Dr. Carol Mangione, UCLA professor of medicine and chair of the NIH panel.
- It reported that viewing menopause as more of an ailment than a normal life stage can lead to overuse of treatment programs such as hormone replacement therapy.
- It's not unusual to find women in various stages of menopause frequenting Pilates, yoga and aquatics classes; the promise of an intense workout without the pounding of high-impact aerobics is often what draws them.
Related Articles
• Good news for menopausal women: You can avoid hot flashes by changing your diet
• Good news for menopausal women: You can avoid hot flashes by changing your diet
• What Is a Women to Do When It Comes to Hormones?
• Vitamin K deficiency found to promote osteoporosis in women
• Weight gain may increase risk of breast cancer in postmenopausal women (press release)
 |
Popular Topics:
Menopause, Hot flashes, Yoga, Diabetes, Breast cancer, Prostate cancer, Heart disease, Depression, High cholesterol, Osteoporosis, Vaccines, Autism, ADHD, Infertility, Weight loss, Cancer, Alzheimer's, Trans fats, Acrylamides, Fluoride, Mercury |
Take Action: Support NaturalNews.com
Email this article to a friend
Share this article on: NewsVine | digg | del.icio.us
Permalink to this article: http://www.NaturalNews.com/011643.html
Reprinting this article: Non-commercial OK, cite NaturalNews.com with clickable link.
|
 |
 |
Receive our Natural Health Newsletter for FREE
Subscribe now (it's free!) to win. We randomly choose a subscriber each month to send $100 in eco-home products or a RealGoods.com gift certificate (our choice). Plus, you'll receive FREE news, articles and action alerts from NaturalNews.com editors and join over 800,000 monthly readers who report extraordinary health improvements after becoming a subscriber!
- Receive breaking news alerts on natural health solutions, renewable energy, the environment, global warming and more.
- Receive a free instant download of our $29 Secret Sources guide that reveals top sources for little-known health and diet solutions.
|
|
 |
 |
Recommended Special Report:
Seven Words that can Change the World
by Joseph R. Simonetta
Read this special report now...
"Seven Words That Can Change the World reveals the astonishing, simple truths that have the power to forever transform our world for the better while freeing our minds from the enslavement of limiting beliefs. This is not a text for the simple-minded; it is a guiding philosophy for the mindful, intelligent few who are wise enough to seek out -- and recognize -- the higher simplicities of truly purposeful living." - Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, editor of NaturalNews.com
|
More on NaturalNews.com:
• Streaming Health Ranger Videos
• CounterThink Cartoons
• FREE Special Reports
• Podcasts
|
 |
|
 |
 |
NEW 6-CD audio set reveals amazing new protocol for reversing cancer, diabetes, obesity, heart disease and more. Click to learn more. |
 |
Own the first 8 Health Ranger Report audio programs on 6 CDs. Covers weight loss, ADHD, vaccinations, processed meats, bone health and more. Click to learn more. |
Featured Videos
Short clip on Aspartame
A short clip on aspartame from the documentary All Jacked Up.
Click here to view now...
Exclusive video on Aspartame
The dangers of aspartame! Exclusive interview footage from Cori Brackett of Sweet Remedy.
Click here to view now...
Exclusive Footage from All Jacked Up!
See interview footage featuring the Health Ranger in the upcoming junk food film, All Jacked Up.
Click here to view now...
Drug Ad Parody
See the Health Ranger's satire parody of Merck's cholesterol drug ad.
Click here to view now... |
|
Read recommendations on supplement companies, health food manufacturers and personal care product makers that you can trust. Our 100% independent review list tells you who to trust and who to avoid in the natural health industry. Click to read. |
|