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Exercise boosts your immunity. It's one of the most touted reasons for getting a good sweat on and in this season where the H1N1 virus has become more popular among school kids than Miley Cyrus, this factoid is getting more play than Jude Law. But is it true? Does exercise really boost your immune system? Two new studies examine this connection and the results are not as clear cut as everyone would like to believe.

When I first fell in love with regular exercise and healthy (or healthier, anyhow) eating in my early 20s, one of the first things I noticed was rather than the 6 or so colds I'd been getting every year I was now only getting one or two. This was especially exciting as I'd watch my non-gym buddies drop like flies all around me while I remained hale and hearty because there's nothing I love more than some nice schadenfreude on a cool fall day. In all seriousness, people began to ask me why I never got the bugs going around and I was more than pleased to tell them "healthy living."
A few years later down the road of hubris and kids in that germ-incubator we call school had me singing a different tune. Suddenly I was getting more of the sickies although I was still proud to note that most of the time the case was pretty mild. This was also the time when I started to really ramp up my exercise (see GFE supreme failure double cardio). But I thought nothing of it because I knew -- fallacy alert! -- that the more I exercised the healthier I was. Still, I never quite made the connection.
Mice are smarter than I am. Well, research mice anyhow. This past week two studies were reported in the New York Times examining the effects of no exercise, moderate exercise and high intensity exercise. Both experiments involved little mice running on twee treadmills (adorbs!) and then being exposed to a lethal-to-mice flu virus. Researchers found:
This whole moderation thing makes sense to me -- in theory of course, you know how I am -- but it is that last sentence that really tweaked my interest. Could intense exercise -- defined as "a workout or race of an hour or more during which your heart rate and respiration soar and you feel as if you are working hard" -- really be worse for your immune system than being sedentary? I would think that of all three groups, the lazy mice would have fared the worst.
"'A J-shaped curve' involving exercise and immunity. In this model, the risk both of catching a cold or the flu and of having a particularly severe form of the infection 'drop if you exercise moderately,' says Mary P. Miles, PhD, an associate professor of exercise sciences at Montana State University and the author of an editorial about exercise and immunity published in the most recent edition of the journal Exercise and Sport Sciences Review. But the risk both of catching an illness and of becoming especially sick when you do "jump right back up" if you exercise intensely or for a prolonged period of time, surpassing the risks among the sedentary."
Not true say hundreds of ghostly rodents. The second study found, "more than half of the sedentary mice died [after being exposed to the flu virus]. But only 12 percent of the gently jogging mice passed away. Meanwhile, an eye-popping 70 percent of the mice in the group that had run for hours died, and even those that survived were more debilitated and sick than the control group." Lest mice aren't convincing enough, researchers also tested the level of immunoglobulins, substances that fight off infection, in the saliva of professional athletes. These researchers concurred with the rodents saying, "the longer the duration and the more intense the exercise, the longer the temporary period of immunosuppression lasts -- anything from a few hours to a few days."
So what's a sweat-lovin' guy or gal to do? Especially if you are signed up for a marathon or other long immunosuppressing race this season? Some suggestions to prevent illness (also known as the OCD Christmas list):
There. I'll stop being your mom now. Anyone else surprised by these studies? What are your tips for staying healthy this season? What has been your experience with your exercise and immune system?
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Breaking News!
Pass this around & wake up everyone, especially, your physicians, people.
This will do it for those that are blind & put a stopper in all the rhetoric.
No room for denial now thanks to good doctors like these.
Soon, more doctors will be joining the ranks of truth to this matter & we can begin our road to recovery.
"Swine Flu -- One of the Most Massive Cover-ups in American History"
Find out all the reasons why pregnant women should NEVER get the H1N1 vaccine. Renowned expert exposes major H1N1 myths.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2009/11/03/What-We-Have-Learned-About-the-Great-Swine-Flu-Pandemic.aspx
"Get a flu shot, if you're into that kind of thing"
Get into that sort of thing! Immunization is not only for you, it's to protect those around you, as well - especially those who are can't be immunized for whatever reason. Don't believe the crazies who are spreading that anti-vaccine nonsense.
My understanding of flu is that if you're immune--had the strain before or got the right shot for it--you're immune system will nip it in the bud. But if your body has never seen a particular strain and you get a snoot full of it, you're probably going to be ill for a few days, strong immune response or not.
With the 1918 pandemic, the young with the strongest immune responses died in huge numbers, because their strong immune systems threw everything but the kitchen sink at it and that wreaked havoc in the lungs.
I don't know how a strong immune system prevents one from getting ill once they've been exposed to a pathogen their body cannot identify. What am I missing?
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