Louisville Medicine Volume 62, Issue 9 | Page 32

DOCTORS’ LOUNGE (continued from page 29) physiologic and biochemical foundation, he argues that our metabolic cascades at the cellular level cannot discern jogging from weight lifting. His statements on mechanical venous return during resistance training provide rationalization for the following: weight lifting is better tolerated (far less angina) in post-myocardial infarction rehabilitation patients than is aerobic exercise. In fact, the literature is beginning to look empirically into the aerobics versus resistance training debate. Studies within the last five year seem to indicate similar benefits in muscle hypertrophy and physiologic adaptations in both activities when “maximum effort” is reached. Yes, a subjective sense of “this is really hard” might be the key ingredient for effective exercise. More studies with more complex biological analysis will surely emerge. The BBS exercise technique combines the medical literature, physiology, and experience from many training sites to illustrate a safe and effective technique for anyone who wants to become healthier. The chap- ter on effective exercise in seniors lists 17 references showing positive health benefits in parameters from bone mineralization to lipid profiles to depression. Perhaps the most refreshing and convincing argument for this Body by Science high intensity super slow weight-training is that Dr. McGuff is not selling us anything. He’d like us to buy his book, and if we live in his town in South Carolina he would be happy to train us – but unlike many of the podcasters and diet/exercise gurus, his website is not an online store. He lists his workout each week (with videos illustrating technique) and posts a teaching point, encouraging healthy discussion amongst the commenters on his site. When our friends and patients start burning out on their New Year’s resolutions to exercise 5 days a week, I say we tell them about this method of weekly safe, effective resistance training. Let’s be more specific than “You need to exercise.” Tell them to go out and do something hard. The anti-fragile human body responds to stressors by getting stronger, in order to not die the next time it is pushed. 1. McGuff, Doug , Little, John. Body By Science. McGraw-Hill. 2009 References 2. Fisher J, Steele J. Questioning the Resistance/Aerobic Training Dichotomy: A commentary on physiological adaptations determined by effort rather than exercise modality. Journal of Human Kinetics. Vol 44/2014. 137-142. 3. Taleb, Nassim Nicholas. Anti-fragile: Things That Gain from Disorder. Random House. 2012. For more information about the work of Doug McGuff, MD, visit www.bodybyscience.net. His book, Body By Science, is available for purchase at http://amzn. to/1A0S99m. Note: Dr. Huecker practices Emergency Medicine with Physicians in Emergency Medicine. He serves as gratis faculty for the University of Louisville School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine. IN MEMORIAL James Patrick Murphy, MD, MMM Debbie Tichenor, RN, Practice Manager for James Patrick Murphy, MD, MMM, passed away on New Years Day 2015 at the age of 57. In honor of his friend and long-time partner in pain care, Dr. Murphy honored Debbi x