#8 - Can extreme exercise damage the heart? With Dr Benjamin Levine

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  • čas přidán 30. 07. 2022
  • Dr Glenn McConell chats with Professor Benjamin Levine who has the best global research track record in Sports cardiology/cardiovascular physiology and exercise. He is the founder and Director of the Institute for Exercise and Environmental Medicine at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas, Professor of Internal Medicine/Cardiology and Distinguished Professor of Exercise Sciences at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. He has published over 400 journal articles with a very high H-index of 109.
    We enjoyed a broad ranging discussion including:
    - how the main determinant to be an endurance athlete/ to have a high VO2 max (aerobic capacity) is the maximum stroke volume (how much blood pumped per beat). Their heart and pericardium stretch more (more compliant) which allows a large stroke volume.
    - Athletes big hearts: Which comes first, the training to increase the heart size or need to have a big heart first?
    -Genetic component to being a great endurance athlete? Can’t use genetic profiles, it’s a gene-environment interaction.
    -Eccentric hypertrophy (volume load) with purely long slow distance exercise, concentric hypertrophy (pressure load) with purely strength training. But many activities are a combination of volume load and pressure load. Eg Rowers have the biggest hearts, thick walls and large volumes (they have a combined strength and endurance type training stimulus): they have mean arterial pressures of 250mmHg during exercise!
    -Resistance trained people do not have a thick walled hearts like one might expect because they only have the high pressure loads during the exercise, unlike people with hypertension that have pressure loads 24/7.
    -Three weeks of bed rest has been found to be worse than 30 years of aging for the body’s capacity to do physical work! Aging leads to atrophy and stiffening of the heart and reduced compliance of the blood vessels and life long exercise training prevents this.
    -Four to five days a week of exercise the sweet spot for optimizing cardiovascular health (one fun easy 60+ min, 2-3 moderate to vigorous, 1 intense plus sone strength training).
    -If been sedentary for a life time (eg 70 year olds) exercise can’t reverse the hearts lack of compliance etc. Starting exercise before the age of 55 is important.
    -Walking not hard sufficient load to maintain the hearts function. Endothelial function and exercise training: greater dilation of blood vessels after exercise training.
    -For the vast majority of people competitive levels of exercise is good for heart health. In a small amount of people that do an extraordinary amount of exercise, exercise-induced right ventricular cardiomyopathy can occur (this will be discussed more in a later podcast by the expert on this, the Cardiologist Dr Andre La Gerche). Genetic cardiomyopathies and exercise. Higher calcium/calcification in coronary arteries in some athletes but this doesn’t increase mortality and appears to reduce mortality. Higher rate of atrial fibrillation with high levels of exercise training but not greater heart disease risk.
    -Exercise can’t be expected to overcome a bad diet.
    Inside Exercise brings to you the who's who of exercise metabolism, exercise physiology and exercise’s effects on health. With scientific rigor, these researchers discuss popular exercise topics while providing practical strategies for all.
    The interviewer, Emeritus Professor Glenn McConell, has an international research profile following 30 years of Exercise Metabolism research experience while at The University of Melbourne, Ball State University, Monash University, the University of Copenhagen and Victoria University.
    He has published over 120 peer reviewed journal articles and recently edited an Exercise Metabolism eBook written by world experts on 17 different topics (link.springer.com/book/10.100....
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Komentáře • 25

  • @Surfsailwaves
    @Surfsailwaves Před 8 dny +2

    Excellent - will listen to this again (and Episode 69 which is what led me here). 0ne big message was that hearts like vigorous exercise. Dr Levine is not only clear, thoughtful and authoritative but wise enough to caution about specific (rare) circumstances where exercise can be risky. Big thanks for valuable insights, and for letting him talk mostly uninterrupted.

  • @DrProfX
    @DrProfX Před 2 měsíci +2

    “At least live well until your time comes!”👍👍

  • @TBCProductions
    @TBCProductions Před 21 dnem +3

    Good stuff 👏 👍

    • @till_57
      @till_57 Před 20 dny

      Agreed. Very informative. Great guest.

  • @sojournern
    @sojournern Před měsícem +6

    Interesting but the one thing he doesn't marry with exercise is nutrition, which is equally important. That would be an incredible video, to see how these issues interact.

    • @hikerJohn
      @hikerJohn Před 26 dny

      No one agrees on what a perfect diet is and it's too hard to do controlled studies over long periods of time. There are just too many things and combinations of things that we eat but most people know what's bad - sugar is bad when consumed all the time and even worse mixed with fats. Almost nothing is as bad as cake frosting and doughnuts

    • @Surfsailwaves
      @Surfsailwaves Před 8 dny

      I agree, also would have loved to hear him talk about statins.

  • @milanpintar
    @milanpintar Před 5 měsíci +1

    I remember being 5 to 10 years old and every time I pushed to improve my body adapted and I became great at it, I think that's the same for the heart for runners. If you don't adapt your heart at the right time you will never adapt it later.

  • @coach7matt
    @coach7matt Před rokem +3

    This was very informative

  • @ai-baking-f1
    @ai-baking-f1 Před 24 dny +1

    Fascinating. Love the data based approach Dr Levine takes

    • @Surfsailwaves
      @Surfsailwaves Před 8 dny

      Yes, mastery of the data plus a rare ability to put it context and distil a complex story into a few words.

  • @KBtx23
    @KBtx23 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Great info!

  • @milanpintar
    @milanpintar Před 5 měsíci +2

    what a great video, thank you for sharing this. I'm in Melbourne and Im being studied at Deakin uni after I had a stent put in a few months ago and had an episode of afib. I got randomised into the the exercise group so I can't wait to see what effect it has under supervision. I'm measuring everything and exercising every day, biggest improvements in my ECG PVC has been due to daily 90 degree sauna. I now have zero PVC all night. I also have a CPAP that helps protect my heart.

    • @insideexercise
      @insideexercise  Před 5 měsíci

      My pleasure. Good luck. Who’s running the study at Deakin University? Did you see my interview with Andre La Gerche? We talked a lot about how higher rates of atrial fibrillation in endurance athletes etc. Despite this, like Benjamin Levine said, Andre pointed out that they live longer etc.

    • @milanpintar
      @milanpintar Před 5 měsíci

      @@insideexercise Dr Kim Way is running the study, I'm also in another study looking into cerebral arteries and the impact of exercise. I'll definitely check the Andre La Gerche video next!

  • @pehu1322
    @pehu1322 Před rokem +3

    awesome interview thank you😊

  • @markflolid5930
    @markflolid5930 Před 8 měsíci

    Is it possible to have been a low EF, but a high SV as a result of a life time of aerobic sports, I.ie., Nordic skiing?

  • @alienautopsy9326
    @alienautopsy9326 Před měsícem

    Interesting facts about Jim Fix’s death

  • @fairwind8676
    @fairwind8676 Před rokem

    I suppose if one follows a low glycation diet and manages blood sugar properly, heart stiffness can be delayed.. although recently I heard about methylglyoxal being a product of glycolysis, which was really disheartening for me.

    • @insideexercise
      @insideexercise  Před rokem +1

      Thanks for watching. Not too sure on this one to be honest.

    • @nood5712
      @nood5712 Před 9 měsíci

      High endurance athletes show higher level of arterial calcification. True or false?
      If true, why?

  • @karinandlarryathome8711
    @karinandlarryathome8711 Před rokem +1

    It makes sense that extreme exercise would enlarge the heart and result in heart failure later in life. Your thoughts?

    • @insideexercise
      @insideexercise  Před rokem +1

      Not my area but I haven’t heard anything about extreme exercise resulting in heart failure later in life. I think it would have come up if it does. I only saw info re the stuff we discussed.

  • @nood5712
    @nood5712 Před 9 měsíci

    Can you over train a muscle? Of course.
    Is heart a muscle? Of course.
    Can you over train your heart? Of course

    • @yves8992
      @yves8992 Před 8 měsíci +7

      Do skeletal muscles rely to a large extent on carbohydrates? Of course.
      Does the heart rely to a large extent on carboydrates? Not at all.
      Is the heart a striated muscle? Not at all.
      Well what is then? The heart is a cardiac muscle.
      On what energy source to cardiac muscles rely then? Fatty acids.
      What did we learn? Skeletal/striated muscle and cardiac muscle are inherently different tissues.