26.2 Miles: Accomplishment or Overdose? How Much Is Too Much for Your Heart?

A recent wellness blog on the New York Times website contradicts Mae West’s old adage that too much of a good thing is better.  Specifically, the question is whether excessive exercise can actually be injurious to your heart.  In two separate clinical studies, veteran British and German male marathoners were compared to healthy, but less active, controls and found by sophisticated imaging to have increased scarring in the marathon runners’ hearts.  This was observational only and any relevance to the runners’ health or prognosis would be speculative.  However, other causes for the scarring such as smoking history or cardiovascular disease was excluded.  This correlation between prolonged running and subtle structural cardiac damage found in humans has also been recently noted in laboratory experiments involving male rats.  Interestingly, the scientists also observed that this fibrosis was reversible, disappearing when the animals stopped their “marathoning”.  All of these studies were published in distinguished medical journals and therefore, were subjected to strict, unbiased editorial review before publication.

 

I will take them at face value and believe that excessive marathon running causes cardiac fibrosis.  Obvious the scar did not limit their athletic ability.  And parenthetically, what do you think the orthopedic consequences of excessive mileage are?  What about all those weight-bearing joints, cartilages, menisci, and tendons that have been pulverized for thousands of miles?  Ever hear of ruptured spinal discs?  Is not the frequency of many biological phenomenon represented by a bell-shaped curve?  Is not drug dosage calculated by a dose response curve to determine what is too little to be effective and what too much to be toxic?  Real life scenarios are dieting can be good, but starvation is bad, normal blood pressure is good, but too low causes circulatory shock, blood sugar control is good, but hypoglycemia causes coma and mental focus is good, but obsessive-compulsive is a psychiatric disorder.

 

There may be some scientific curiosity as to the outer limits of mechanical endurance the human heart can safely endure.  But the fitness fanatics studied are curiosities in the laboratory of exercise physiology.  These studies have absolutely no relevance to the 6 million other human beings on this planet that are trying to take control of their lives by sensible physical exertion.  Moderate exercise is undeniably good for you, period.  Before initiating on such a program, patients with heart disease or who are at risk of having undiagnosed cardiac problems should check with their doctors or be monitored.  It seems to me a more productive area of research would be to further define what the optimal amount of exercise is now that we know what is too much and that none is too little.

 

By Norman Silverman, MD, with Ryan McKennon, DO and Ren Carlton

Make Angel Investments That Go 10x, Unleashing Monster Returns for a Family Juice Business

I look for angel investments that have the potential to produce a 10x return on my investment in 5 years. Startup investing is one of the more risky investment categories. Therefore, you should expect these businesses to have the possibility of doing well. If you invest in 10 businesses, and nine of them fail, the remaining business needs to give you a 10x return just to break even. Ideally, you will do better than that and enjoy healthy returns.

Build Your List of Potential Investors, Pitch Investors Properly, How Kevin Systrom Raised $500,000 in Two Weeks to Launch InstagramFind Angel Funding & Venture Capital for Business Startups, Entrepreneurs, & First Time Founders – Episode 12

Most startups need funding at some point. Once you have the addressed all of the items in the previous episodes, it is time to build your list of potential investors and start the conversations. They can be friends, family, social network, social media contacts, work colleagues, people in the business industry, etc. Try to put together a list of at least one hundred people. A list of one hundred potential investors may seems like a lot, but the more people you have on the list, the better your chances are of success.

Making Money With Your Business, Profit and Cash Flow, Five Sustainable Companies That Make a Lot of MoneyFind Angel Funding & Venture Capital for Business Startups, Entrepreneurs, & First Time Founders – Episode 10

It is time to make money! You have been through a couple of rounds of market testing now you feel like you are on to something. The next step is to run the numbers to make sure that the business is sustainable. There are two sides to making money, profitability and cash flow.

Why Competition Is Good For Entrepreneurs and How Blockbuster’s $50 Million Mistake Helped Reed Hastings and Netflix Destroy a $6 Billion Empire Find Angel Funding & Venture Capital for Business Startups, Entrepreneurs, & First Time Founders – Epis

When battling for resources or investment, early-stage entrepreneurs may believe that competition is a bad thing. On the surface, they are correct. There are a limited number of angel investors willing to provide a finite amount of venture capital to founders.

Upscaling and Scaling Business Ideas into Reality – Jeff Bezos takes Amazon from Online Bookstore to Global DominanceFind Angel Funding & Venture Capital for Business Startups, Entrepreneurs, & First Time Founders – Episode 4

Congratulations, your market testing worked and you were able to find customers, or at least one customer. Your beta test was successful and you are confident that you are ready for more. What do you do when you start getting customers or users? I recommend you do some scaling or upscaling.

What Kind of Business Should You Start? – How Mark Zuckerberg Pivoted From Rating Hotness to FacebookFind Angel Funding & Venture Capital for Business Startups, Entrepreneurs, & First Time Founders – Episode 1

When it comes to brainstorming startup ideas, new entrepreneurs and even seasoned ones scratch their heads in confusion. Living in the information age, you can scan the current market and see countless new business ideas. With so many options out there, how do you know which one is right for you?

Why Would a Doctor Abandon a Steady Paycheck to Become an Entrepreneur?

As physicians, we are expected to be compliant with rules, restrictions, and regulations. We are expected to be risk averse. We are expected to be “providers,” but not necessarily innovators or leaders. As the healthcare system becomes increasingly consolidated into large overcrowded clinics, we are required to perform to the standards set by bureaucrats and clinic managers. These rules are often at odds with the best interests of patients and with our sanity.
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