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Exercise and your immune system

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  • Exercise and your immune system

    Exercise: Good or bad for immunity?

    Regular exercise is one of the pillars of healthy living. It improves cardiovascular health, lowers blood pressure, helps control body weight, and protects against a variety of diseases. But does it help maintain a healthy immune system? Just like a healthy diet, exercise can contribute to general good health and therefore to a healthy immune system. It may contribute even more directly by promoting good circulation, which allows the cells and substances of the immune system to move through the body freely and do their job efficiently.

    Some scientists are trying to take the next step to determine whether exercise directly affects a person’s susceptibility to infection. For example, some researchers are looking at whether extreme amounts of intensive exercise can cause athletes to get sick more often or somehow impairs their immune function. To do this sort of research, exercise scientists typically ask athletes to exercise intensively; the scientists test their blood and urine before and after the exercise to detect any changes in immune system components such as cytokines, white blood cells, and certain antibodies. While some changes have been recorded, immunologists do not yet know what these changes mean in terms of human immune response. No one yet knows, for example, whether an increase in cytokines is helpful or has any true effect on immune response. Similarly, no one knows whether a general increase in white cell count is a good thing or a bad thing.

    But these subjects are elite athletes undergoing intense physical exertion. What about moderate exercise for average people? Does it help keep the immune system healthy? For now, even though a direct beneficial link hasn’t been established, it’s reasonable to consider moderate regular exercise to be a beneficial arrow in the quiver of healthy living, a potentially important means for keeping your immune system healthy along with the rest of your body.

    One approach that could help researchers get more complete answers about whether lifestyle factors such as exercise help improve immunity takes advantage of the sequencing of the human genome. This opportunity for research based on updated biomedical technology can be employed to give a more complete answer to this and similar questions about the immune system. For example, microarrays or “gene chips” based on the human genome allow scientists to look simultaneously at how thousands of gene sequences are turned on or off in response to specific physiological conditions — for example, blood cells from athletes before and after exercise. Researchers hope to use these tools to analyze patterns in order to better understand how the many pathways involved act at once.

  • #2
    Re: Exercise and your immune system

    I just read this in a publication from Harvard. I have always stopped working out if I was sick but never thought much into exercise boosting or hurting my immune system on a regular healthy day. What are some of your thoughts on exercise and immune system? Do you workout when you sick or have a cold? Just curious to see how others here think about this subject.

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    • #3
      Re: Exercise and your immune system

      I feel like it boosts the immune system until you get into over training. I get sick alot less now then when I was younger and ran my self to death everyday.
      Animal the manimal

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      • #4
        Re: Exercise and your immune system

        I definitely feel much better and generally healthier these days than when I was younger, but a lot of that is due to a lot less drinking and a much healthier lifestyle in general.

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        • #5
          Re: Exercise and your immune system

          If I do intense wotkout or cardio, I have gotten sick within a day. I cant overdo it
          Veritas Vos Liberabit

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          • #6
            Re: Exercise and your immune system

            I have definitely gotten worse after a hard workout if I was already feeling something coming on. It just makes sense to me that hard workouts weaken your body and immune system. I am trying to focus much more these days on just a generally healthy lifestyle with foods and supplements I use to never think into such as garlic and apple cider vinegar.

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