Exercise Being Good or Bad
Can exercise be a bad thing Sudden death during or soon after strenuous
exertion on the squash court or on the army training grounds, is not unheard of.
1 trained marathon runners are not
immune to fatal heart attacks. But no one knows just 2
common these sudden deaths linked to exercise are. The
registration and investigation of such 3 is very patchy; only a national survey could determine the true 4 of sudden deaths in sports. But the climate of
medical opinion is shifting in 5 of
exercise, for the person recovering from a heart attack as
6 as the average lazy individual. Training can help the
victim of a heart attack by lowering the 7 of oxygen the heart needs at any given level of work
8 the patient can do more before reaching the point where
chest pains indicate a heart starved of oxygen. The question is, should
middle-aged people, 9 particular, be
screened for signs of heart disease before 10
vigorous exercise Most cases of sudden death in
sport are caused by lethal arrhythmias in the beating of the heart, often in
people 11 undiagnosed coronary heart
disease. In North America 12 over 35 is
advised to have a physical check-up and even an exercise electrocardiogram. The
British, on the whole, think all this testing is unnecessary. Not many people
die from exercise, 13 , and ECGs (心电图)
are notoriously inaccurate. However, two medical cardiologists at the Victoria
Infirmary in Glasgow, advocate screening by exercise ECG for people over 40, or
younger people 14 at risk of developing
coronary heart disease. Individuals showing a particular abnormality in their
ECGs 15 , they say, a 10 to 20 times
greater risk of subsequently developing signs of coronary heart disease, or of
sudden death.
A. taking up
B. trying on
C. getting over
D. doing with