Cardio and Diabetes

The Cardio Link to Diabetes

Young adults who don’t exercise may develop diabetes later in life
 

As a college student, you were probably more concerned with schoolwork (and the occasional party) than your health as a middle-aged man. But new research suggests that young people who don’t regularly exercise are more likely to develop diabetes when they’re older.

The Northwestern University study examined the cardiovascular fitness level of people between the ages of 18 and 30. Those with poor stamina during a treadmill test were found to be two to three times more likely to have the disease 20 years later than fit participants.

The other crucial predictor? Besides having a low fitness level, it’s your body mass index (BMI), which can indicate if you’re in good shape or not. The higher a participant’s BMI, the more likely they were to develop diabetes.

But it’s not too late to do anything about it. If you or your children fall in that age range, take special care to work out more often and boost your cardio fitness. One way to get your heart pumping: Interval training. Plan your cardio workout and start burning fat.

-Kasia Galazka          Men’s Health Magazine

     In Summery guys and girls, we have to start teaching our kids and teens

that Cardio training needs to become a way of life.  Unlike our older

generations, today’s kids are bombarded with fast food and quick to fix meals

that are loaded down with too many calories.  It’s so much more important

now to have our children exerciseing not only because of all the calories and

excess saturated fat, but they don’t even get the exercise in school that we all

grew up with.  P.E. is nothing like it used to be, and now many of our schools

have taken out recess.   The world has changed and like everything else we

have to train our children to adapt if we are going to maintain a healthy

society in the future.   That’s why we have incorporated our cardio fitness

drills in to our Karate Studio to offer our members a complete fitness center

that is here to try and make a difference.   It’s up to us as parents AND role

models to teach our children through example how important it is to take

care of ourselves.  Our children watch how we eat, and how we spend our

extra time.  We must start teaching our youth today,  so we can offer them

a healthy tomorrow. 

 

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