Updated
Updated · HuffPost · May 17
Study Finds 12-Week Nordic Walking Boosts Heart Function in 130 Coronary Artery Disease Patients
Updated
Updated · HuffPost · May 17

Study Finds 12-Week Nordic Walking Boosts Heart Function in 130 Coronary Artery Disease Patients

3 articles · Updated · HuffPost · May 17
  • A 130-patient study found 12 weeks of Nordic walking delivered the biggest gains in heart-related functional capacity among people with coronary artery disease.
  • Researchers randomly assigned patients to Nordic walking, high-intensity interval training or moderate-to-vigorous exercise, then tracked them for 14 more weeks using six-minute walk tests, health surveys and depression screening.
  • Nordic walking outperformed the other programs on exercise capacity, a key predictor of future cardiovascular events in coronary artery disease patients.
  • The benefit likely comes from using poles to engage upper- and lower-body muscles at once, raising heart rate and energy expenditure while also aiding posture, gait and balance.
  • The findings add to guidance that heart patients should exercise regularly—typically 150 minutes of moderate or 75 minutes of vigorous aerobic activity weekly—after consulting a doctor.
Does Nordic walking unlock a unique heart-protecting hormone that high-intensity training misses?
Is Nordic walking a truly superior workout, or just a clever way to make people exercise harder?