
Two hours of strength training a week linked to 44% lower heart attack risk in women
Observational study of 117,000 women finds dose-response benefit, while separate research shows five-minute walks offset the harms of prolonged sitting.
Women who performed at least two hours of strength training per week had a 44 percent lower risk of heart attack and a 20 percent lower risk of serious cardiovascular disease, according to an analysis of 117,025 women followed for an average of 14.5 years. The study, published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, found a dose-response relationship: each additional weekly hour of resistance exercise was associated with a further 5 percent reduction in cardiovascular disease risk and a 14 percent reduction in heart attack risk. The associations were strongest among women who combined strength work with aerobic exercise and limited sedentary time. Because the data relied on self-reported activity, the findings demonstrate correlation, not causation.
Viewed from Buenos Aires, physiotherapist Vanessa Andrade translates such evidence into accessible routines for older adults, recommending a four-exercise chair-based Pilates sequence that targets quadriceps, glutes, abductors and calves without stressing the joints. Fitness coaches elsewhere note that squats—which engage large muscle groups and demand high energy expenditure—can outperform static planks for abdominal definition and metabolic burn, while also strengthening tendons, ligaments and bone density. The principle is consistent: regular loading of the body’s largest muscles yields systemic benefits that isolated or passive postures do not.
The mechanism extends beyond muscle. Prolonged sitting slows the muscular contractions that support circulation and regulate blood sugar and lipids, contributing to metabolic disruption even in people who exercise. A separate study of more than 19,000 individuals found that walking for five minutes every hour improved mood and reduced fatigue, striking a practical balance between health gains and adherence. Nutritionists in Jakarta caution that travel—with its disrupted meal timing, dehydration, stress and sleep loss—can destabilise blood glucose, and they advise carrying protein-rich snacks and water to blunt the swings. The common thread is that movement must be distributed across the day, not compressed into a single session.
The observational nature of the strength-training study means randomised controlled trials will be needed to establish causality. The World Health Organization is expected to review its global physical activity guidelines in 2025, a process that will weigh such evidence alongside data on sedentary behaviour and intermittent movement. For now, the findings reinforce a message that is gaining traction in clinical and fitness circles: protecting the heart and metabolism requires not just scheduled exercise, but frequent, short bursts of activity woven into the hours between.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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A large analysis of more than 100,000 women shows that two hours of weekly strength training cut heart attack risk by 44%. The protective effect is even stronger when combined with endurance exercise. The findings come from two US long-term studies and appear in a top cardiology journal.
Strength training is framed as a way to lower mortality risk, with special attention to blood sugar swings while traveling. Experts warn that time zone changes, irregular eating, and stress can destabilize glucose levels, and they recommend short exercise routines to maintain metabolic balance.
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