Text Only
Search Special English

Waltzing Pumps Up Heart Patients

28 November 2006
Download Audio - MP3 audio clip
Listen in RealAudio audio clip

This is the VOA Special English Health Report.

A social dancing program at a senior citizen center in Brooklyn, New York
A social dancing program at a senior citizen center in Brooklyn, New York
Dancing is good exercise.  Now a study shows it can improve the health and quality of life of people with mild to moderate heart failure.

Heart failure is not the same as a heart attack or heart stoppage.  It means the heart is weakened and cannot pump blood normally.  As a result, blood and fluid collect in the lungs and fluid builds up in the feet and legs. 

This condition develops over time.  In the United States, heart failure is a cause or the cause of about three hundred thousand deaths each year.  So says the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute.

People with heart failure get tired and short of breath easily.  Daily activities become difficult.  But their doctors may want them to perform aerobic exercise at least three times a week.  Aerobic exercise is activity that makes the heart and lungs work harder and increases oxygen use. 

Many patients, though, lose interest in traditional programs of exercise training.  

So researchers tested the effects of dancing.  They chose waltz dancing because it is internationally known.  They presented the study at a recent meeting of the American Heart Association. 

Doctor Romualdo Belardinelli at Lancisi Heart Institute in Ancona, Italy, led the study.  It involved eighty-nine men and twenty-one women with mild to moderate heart failure.  The average age was fifty-nine.

One group of forty-four people took part in a supervised program of riding exercise bicycles and walking on treadmills three times a week. 

Forty-four others danced three times a week.  Each time, they danced a combination of slow waltzes and fast waltzes for twenty-one minutes.  A third group with twenty-two people did not exercise.  All three groups were observed for eight weeks.

The study found improved oxygen use in both the dance and exercise groups, so the people got tired less easily.  The dancers showed an eighteen percent improvement.  In the exercise group, it was sixteen percent.  The group that did not exercise had no improvement.

The researchers say the findings were the same as an earlier study of slow and fast waltzing.  That study showed it was safe for patients with heart disease and a history of heart attacks.  Doctor Belardinelli says doctors have to find something that may capture the interest of patients.  He says exercise should be fun, so people will want to continue for a lifetime.

And that’s the VOA Special English Health Report, written by Lawan Davis.  I’m Barbara Klein.

emailme.gif E-mail this article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version
  Featured Story
City of Pittsburgh Enjoys Its Days in the Sun  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Health Insurance Eases Worries of Senegal's 'Market Women'  Audio Clip Available
Mary Cassatt, 1844-1926: She Broke Social Barriers With her Art  Audio Clip Available
Words And Their Stories: Hold Your Horses!  Audio Clip Available
Poor Nations Get G8 Promise of $20 Billion Toward Food Security  Audio Clip Available
How Did He Do It? Lakers Coach Phil Jackson and His 10 NBA Titles  Audio Clip Available
Does US Need a Second Stimulus Plan?  Audio Clip Available
American History Series: Hopes, Fears and the Election of 1860  Audio Clip Available
Studying in the US: From 'In Loco Parentis' to 'Partnership'  Audio Clip Available
Race to the Moon: NASA and the Early Apollo Flights of the 1960s  Audio Clip Available
Experts Urge Limits on Widely Used Pain Drug  Audio Clip Available
Could Typhoons Help to Prevent Severe Quakes?  Audio Clip Available
Yard Work: When People Choose Sod Over Seed  Audio Clip Available