Finn's Take· TL;DRA groundbreaking study published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine is forcing researchers to reconsider how much exercise adults truly need for meaningful heart protection. Adults should aim to do between 560 and 610 minutes a week of moderate to vigorous physical activity to achieve a substantial reduction in the risk of heart attacks and stroke , according to findings that tracked more than 17,000 adults over nearly eight years.
This is between 3-4 times higher than the current public health recommendation that adults do at least 150 minutes a week of moderate to vigorous physical exercise such as brisk walking, running or cycling . The stark difference between current guidelines and the study's recommendations represents roughly an hour and a half of moderate-to-vigorous activity per day .
The research reveals a sobering reality about current exercise recommendations. Those adults who met the 150 minute a week guideline on exercise experienced a modest 8-9% reduction in cardiovascular risk , which researchers described as "consistent but modest" across all fitness levels. To push that figure to 20%, participants needed approximately 340 to 370 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous activity per week, more than double the recommendation .
In order to achieve substantial protection, classed as a greater than 30% risk reduction, between 560 and 610 minutes of moderate to vigorous exercise a week was needed . Perhaps most telling, this level of exercise was only achieved by 12% of people in the study .
The study uncovered another crucial factor that current guidelines largely ignore: individual fitness levels significantly impact how much exercise someone needs for heart protection. People who are less fit need to do slightly more exercise than those who are very fit to get the same cardiovascular benefits . The difference isn't trivial either.
The analysis found that those individuals with the lowest fitness needed approximately 30-50 additional minutes per week compared with those with high fitness to achieve equivalent benefits . For example, to achieve a 20% reduction in the risk of cardiovascular events, 370 minutes of moderate to vigorous exercise was needed for those at the lowest fitness compared to 340 minutes for those at the highest fitness levels .
The researchers say that the current one-size fits-all advice on exercise may need to be changed and replaced with personalised targets according to an individual's fitness level . This personalized approach could revolutionize how doctors and health professionals prescribe exercise for cardiovascular protection.
The implications extend beyond individual health decisions. Current guidelines may need fundamental restructuring to distinguish between minimum safety thresholds and optimal protection levels. "Future guidelines may need to differentiate between the minimal moderate to vigorous exercise volume required for a basic safety margin and the substantially higher volumes necessary for optimal cardiovascular risk reduction" , researchers noted. This research suggests we may have been setting the bar far too low for those seeking serious heart protection through exercise.