exercise Outperforms Yoga for โฃVascular Health, Study Finds
Contrary to widespread belief, conventional exercise โappears more effectiveโ than โyoga in improving vascularโ health, according โคto a โnew study published in Advances in Integrative Medicine.
The study systematically reviewedโ existing research – including randomized โฃcontrolled trials – comparing yogaโ to other exercise โฃinterventions in sedentary adults. Researchers focused on assessing the impact of these activities on vascular function,โค measuredโข through ultrasound.
Vascular function, the efficiency ofโ blood vessels in transporting blood, is a โcritical indicator โขof cardiovascular health.โข Elasticity andโข responsiveness of these vessels are key. Sedentary behavior and โขprolonged sitting are known toโข impair this function, increasing risks of hypertension, cholesterol buildup, and thrombosis.
“Think of blood vessels like โflexible garden hoses,” explains Dr. Leena David, โฃa specialist inโค medical diagnostic imagingโ and lecturer โขat the University ofโ Sharjah. “If โthey stiffen, the risk of heart attacks and strokes increases. Our study shows that structured exercise โkeeps those โฃhoses flexible, while yoga providesโ some benefits but not as reliably. Middle-aged and โขolderโ adultsโฃ frequently enough โnotice improvements from yoga, butโ younger adults might not.”
The findings โare meaningful given that an estimated 300 million peopel worldwide โpractice yoga, โขandโค over 620 million are affectedโ by โคcardiovascular โฃdisease.
Theโ research indicates that customary exercise modalitiesโค – such as Taiโข Chi, Pilates, and high-intensity interval training – consistently outperformโค yoga in improving vascular function in โขsedentary individuals.โฃ Dr. David emphasizesโค that the type, intensity, andโ consistency ofโ physicalโฃ activity are โขcrucial โfor vascular health.
“Even โsimple routines can โคmake arteries more resilient. Bloodโ vessels have a memory โฃ-โฃ and every โคworkout โhelps them forget the damage of sitting all day,” she says. She describes prolonged sitting as โ”the new smokingโ – silent, sneaky, and stealing years from your arteries,” and movement as theโ “perfect antidote.”
Whileโ yoga remains accessible and culturally significant, the studyโ suggests supplementing โขit withโ more vigorous exercise โขfor consistent cardiovascularโฃ benefits. The authors advocate for aโข nuanced approach to physical activity in public health โขmessaging.
“Yoga has deep cultural rootsโข and shows promise โคas an inclusive, โaccessible health intervention,” Dr. David notes. “At the same โขtime, the fitness andโ digitalโ healthโข industries can leverage these insights to develop structured exercise programsโ and technology-driven solutions forโ sedentary populations.”
The โคresearchers hope their findings will encourage healthcare providers toโ reccommend exercise notโฃ only for weight management but also as a proven strategy for improving vascular health. Yoga remains โคaโ valuable option, particularly for older โขadults and those unable โฃor unwilling โto โengage in high-intensityโค workouts. Ultimately, Dr.David concludes, “On a larger scale,โ public health campaigns could emphasize that movement is medicine,” encouraging a mix of exerciseโ and yoga to make heart health more โขaccessible โคand culturally โappropriate.