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The AFU and Urban Legend Archive Medical cholesterol cecil
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From: flaps@dgp.toronto.edu (Alan J Rosenthal)
Subject: Re: Cholesterol Underrated
Date: 16 Sep 93 02:08:48 GMT
mds@cpqhou.sys.hou.compaq.com (Mark Stockton) writes:
>- cholesterol helps to clog arteries
>- restriction in bloodflow due to clogged arteries causes the heart
> muscle to work harder much as does aerobic exercise
Now. Good ole Unca Cece seems to have anticipated this September of 1993.
>From The Straight Dope, page 273-4. Warning: requires a non-zero amount of
thought to integrate with the current topic. Morons need read no further.
--
Q: I have a question about what seems to be a fundamental contradiction in all the hype about the advantages of aerobic exercise on the one hand and the disadvantages of coffee and caffeine on the other. As I understand it, the idea in aerobic exercise is to get your heart pumping at an accelerated rate (say, 150 beats per minute) for a sustained period (say, half an hour). This supposedly strengthens your heart and enables it to beat at a slower rate the rest of the time. OK, but they also say coffee and caffeine are bad for you because (among other things) they make your heart pound too fast. How come it's good when aerobics makes your heart pound faster but bad when coffee does the same thing? Why can't you get a good workout by just trekking down to the local diner every morning and drinking a gallon of Maxwell House while doing the crossword puzzle in the New York Times? Or is this just another example of me-generation doublespeak? -- Kathleen S., Washington, D.C.
On a related note, one of Cecil's many admirers here at Straight Dope World HQ has inquired whether a fat person who loses a lot of weight isn't better off than a person who's been skinny all his or her life, since the fat person has been doing years of involuntary weight-lifting -- i.e., hefting his lardbucket self around every day. A beguiling thought if true, but Cecil is obliged to report that, unfortunately, it ain't. As a rule, as obesity increases, activity decreases -- fat people frequently feel tired because their bodies are trying to ease the strain on the vital organs. So while they're carting around a lot more weight than average, they move a lot less than average. The net result is that the fat person probably performs less heart-strenghtening physical work than an ordinary person, and as a result his heart is in worse shape. But suppose some ambitious fat person made a point of exercising energetically despite his condition. And suppose that person managed not to die of a heart attack in the process. And suppose finally that he managed to take off a lot of weight very suddenly. That person might well have an admirably muscular heart -- as long as he kept exercising. If he stopped, though, the heart muscles would lose tone within a few weeks. Also, the blood vessels of our formerly fat person would pobably be coated with atherosclerotic plaque, meaning we're potentially talking Infarct City. Wherefore abandon these puppylike excuses for not exercising -- I swear, only the Teeming Millions could come up with the Drip-Grind Diet -- and hump it on out to the gym today.
[He omits the additional fact that those rolls of fat contain serious amounts
of capillaries, making your heart beat harder all the time, which wears you
out.]
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