By Benjamin Levine, M.D.
Director, Institute for Exercise and Environmental Medicine
Professor of Internal Medicine
Everyone wants to know how much exercise to do for optimal health. At the AHA this year, I participated in a cardiovascular seminar titled “Controversies in Exercise Training”; my particular task was to address the questions of whether it is possible to do too much exercise and actually harm your heart, and is there a Goldilocks-like “sweet spot” that is just right?
I find there are four key issues that come up frequently when I discuss this subject with my patients. The first is survival. It seems clear from the study of thousands of athletes that being an athlete is associated with improved survival. Moreover, the updated physical activity guidelines presented also at this year’s AHA meeting make it quite clear that evidence from hundreds of thousands of patients and healthy individuals shows that a) some exercise is better than none; and b) in general, more is better. Although the “dose” of exercise is a bit hard to quantify, it seems clear that three to five hours per week of physical activity ranging from moderate to vigorous exercise gets the vast majority of this effect, though there might be some small advantage in up to six to eight hours per week, especially for outcomes such as heart failure. More exercise than that, which is typically practiced by competitive marathoners or triathletes, is of course necessary for competitive fitness but does not confer immortality or protection from cardiovascular disease.