• Home
  • Healthy Living
  • Mind & Body
  • Workouts

150 minutes of exercise may not be enough to prevent heart attacks, says new study: Why men need twice as much exercise than women per week

November 12, 2025 by admin in Mind & Body

Heart benefits increase when women stretch the same routines per week by 50 per cent and men by 200 per cent

While we know that 150-minute moderate intensity physical activity per week is the global fitness norm, new research suggests that the number should be higher if we want to protect the heart. There’s more. That activity needs to be higher for men than women, twice as much.

The study, published in the journal Nature Cardiovascular Research, indicates that men and women should have different exercise goals to prevent heart disease. The WHO recommends that adults aim for at least 150–300 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity or 75–150 minutes of vigorous-intensity activity per week, plus muscle-strengthening activities at least two days a week.

For the study, researchers tracked more than 85,000 adults in the UK with wearables for seven years, who did moderate to vigorous exercise, and correlated their activity patterns with their risk of developing heart disease and dying. Women without heart disease, who completed 250 minutes of exercise each week, lowered their risk of heart disease by about 30 per cent. Men required 530 minutes for the same benefit. Women without heart disease, who met the recommended 150 minutes of exercise per week, saw their heart disease risk drop by 22 per cent. For men, that risk went by 17 per cent. Women with existing heart disease, who exercised for 250 minutes a week, dropped their risk of death by threefold compared to men, who needed twice as much activity.

 

What are takeaways?

“The biggest takeaway is the gender-specific approach to exercise. Women can achieve the same cardio-protective gains as men with lesser effort. But what is more significant is that heart benefits increase when women stretch the same routines per week by 50 per cent and men by 200 per cent,” says Dr Abhishek Srivastava, Director, Centre for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital, Mumbai. He specialises in cardiac rehabilitation.

 

What explains the gender difference in exercise benefits?

The female hormone estrogen burns more fat. Studies show women may be more efficient at burning fat as a fuel source during exercise compared to men. “Women’s muscles are like marathon runners; men’s muscles are more like a combination of sprint and marathon runners. The female hormone estrogen impacts how the body uses fuel. This may lead to a greater reliance on fat as an energy source during exercise compared to carbohydrates. Also, women have a higher proportion of type 1 muscle fibres, which are better at handling oxidative stress or cell damage and, therefore, help in the efficacy of shorter routines,” says Dr Srivastava.

Men’s muscles are made for shorter, powerful movements, which even have afterburn capabilities, but women have more workout efficiency.

However, Dr Srivastava explains, after menopause, women are exposed to the same cardiac risks as men.

 

What is moderate to vigorous exercise that study authors talk about?

It is any routine which elevates heart rate and breathing. “Ideally, it is anything that makes you break a sweat and talk in shorter sentences while doing that activity,” says Dr Srivastava.

 

Is more better when it comes to exercise?

While the study shows that increasing our exercise time can be more cardio-protective, Dr Srivastava feels it is a one-off and guidelines are formed by a corroborative review of all studies linking exercise patterns with heart health. “Besides, we see very little compliance of the 150-minute routine. Let’s get there first. Even 250 minutes are a stretch, leave aside 500 for regular people. But the study does prove that more exercise and a consistent routine is good for the heart. Exercise is non-negotiable for preventive heart health,” says Dr Srivastava.

About The Author: admin

How to build a consistent workout routine even if you’re lazy

Related Posts

  • The best exercises to prevent and reduce ‘bingo wings’
    February 28, 2023 0 comments
    Tuckshop lady arms. Bingo wings. Read more!
  • 8 best exercise equipment for legs you can’t miss out on
    December 25, 2023 0 comments
    For a complete physical fitness regimen, it is important that targeted exercises for each major Read more!
  • Doctors Share 6 Health Benefits of Chia Seeds—And How to Eat Them
    November 04, 2024 0 comments
    Eating more superfoods is one simple way to buoy your health with minimal effort. While no one food Read more!

Leave a Comment! Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Recent Posts
  • 150 minutes of exercise may not be enough to prevent heart attacks, says new study: Why men need twice as much exercise than women per week
  • How to build a consistent workout routine even if you’re lazy
  • Green tea vs black tea: Which boosts metabolism more?
  • 5 simple psychology-backed ways to deal with lingering anxiety
  • Protein shake vs natural protein: Which works best post-workout?
Categories
  • Healthy Living
  • Mind & Body
  • Workouts
© 2024 FitnessRant. All Rights Reserved.   |   Contact us   |   Privacy Policy   |   For Advertisers