Exercise: Not Just for the Healthy
- 1 July 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in The Physician and Sportsmedicine
- Vol. 19 (7) , 46-56
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00913847.1991.11702210
Abstract
In brief Exercise helps patients who have a wide range of medical conditions. Physicians can suggest it as an adjunct to treatment of non-insulin-dependent diabetes, peripheral vascular disease, and osteoporosis. Exercise attenuates the physiologic changes observed with aging and improves anxiety, depression, and self-esteem as well as many of the adverse effects of pregnancy.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- Deterring bone loss by exercise intervention in premenopausal and postmenopausal womenCalcified Tissue International, 1989
- Physiological Bases for the Treatment of the Physically Active Individual with DiabetesSports Medicine, 1989
- Intermittent Claudication—Surgical Reconstruction or Physical Training?Annals of Surgery, 1989
- Effects of Physical Training on Peripheral Vascular Disease: A Controlled StudyAngiology, 1989
- Brisk walking does not stop bone loss in postmenopausal womenBone, 1988
- Involutional OsteoporosisNew England Journal of Medicine, 1986
- Effect of muscle glycogen depletion on in vivo insulin action in man.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1983
- Synergistic interaction between exercise and insulin on peripheral glucose uptake.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1981
- Glucose Turnover During Exercise in Healthy Man and in Patients with Diabetes MellitusDiabetes, 1979
- EXERCISE IN DIABETES MELLITUSArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1936