Five minutes a day of eccentric exercise can improve your life

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As little as five minutes a day of eccentric exercise could offer significant health benefits to those living a stagnant lifestyle, researchers from Edith Cowan University (ECU) found.

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From: Edith Cowan University

Five minutes a day eccentric exercise can improve your life, ECU study finds

As little as five minutes a day of eccentric exercise could offer significant health benefits to those living a stagnant lifestyle, researchers from Edith Cowan University (ECU) found.

The study, led by Dr Benjamin Kirk and Professor Ken Nosaka in ECU’s School of Medical and Health Sciences, evaluated the effects of a five-minute a day, home-based bodyweight eccentric exercise program on physical fitness, body composition, and both physical and mental health in sedentary individuals.

Over a four-week period, the participants completed daily exercise consisting of 10 repetitions each of chair squats, chair reclines, wall push-ups, and heel drops focusing on eccentric - muscle lengthening contractions, by slowly stretching contracting muscles such as sitting to a chair slowly in which the front thigh muscles are lengthened while supporting the body weight.

"We saw significant improvements in muscle strength, flexibility, strength endurance and mental health, suggesting that even small amounts of daily exercise can provide sustainable and detectable benefits in sedentary individuals,” Professor Ken Nosaka said.

“The results highlighted that eccentric exercises are very effective in improving fitness. This type of exercise is also more accessible to most people, as it makes use of body weight and eliminates the need to go to a gym.

“The eccentric exercises can also be spread out during the day, which makes it more achievable to those who are time poor.”

Sedentary lifestyles can be deadly

Physical inactivity is estimated to contribute to some 5.3 million deaths in Australia each year. It is estimated that only 63% of people met the aerobic guidelines for adult physical activity, while only 29% met the muscle strengthening activity criteria.

Only 19% of Australia’s adult population currently meet both aerobic and physical strength guidelines.

“As you get older, your fitness level will decline by 1% to 2% a year on average. So, for someone who is 50 years old their fitness levels will be 20% less than compared to when they were 30 years old,” Professor Nosaka said.

“Performing exercises regularly is very important, particularly as people get older, as it lowers the risk of chronic disease, injury, fatigue and helps with mental health.”

A foundation for a better life

While results from ECU’s recent study show there are significant health benefits from the five-minutes a day exercise plan, much greater benefits can be gained from increasing the volume of the exercises gradually.

“The guidelines are for 150 minutes a week of exercise, but that figure can often discourage people, especially if they are just starting out. Using five minutes a day as a starting point and building on that, would allow people to see more results,” Professor Nosaka added.

“Every muscle contraction counts, but you need at least ten contractions for each exercise in order to gain some results.”

The study has been published in the European Journal of Applied Physiology.

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Research Springer Nature, Web page
Journal/
conference:
European Journal of Applied Physiology
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Edith Cowan University, Southern Cross University
Funder: Open Access funding enabled and organized by CAUL and its Member Institutions. This research was supported by funding from the Defence, Science and Technology group of the Department of Defence, Australia (ABN 68 706 814 312). Defence Science and Technology Group, 9378, Kazunori Nosaka.
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