I should stop listening to my cardio who is one of the top one at the best facility in Canada for heart transplant.
If you read me correctly in one of my previous post I mentioned that sedentary life can be dangerous for the heart so dont turn my own point against me. (my own valve has been strengthen by my active lifestyle, heavy lifting included my cardio told me ) You do not need to go from one extreme to the other to prove your point. There is a whole world between being a sedentary sheep and a heavy lifter nut.
What I told and will repeat is that Heavy Lifting ( wether it is cow lifting, log liftings, car lifting, pregnant woman lifting ...) put you slightly more at risk of aortic dissection when you have weaker aorta walls. Fact has been proven, just read instead of creating your own statistics. Now, that you can improve your heavy lifting by a better technique while in a gym so that you minimise your risk, I believe it is possible and it is good that you spread this message. And again, I am not saying that you are more at risk than other type of population but the risk is definitely here.
Do not take those cardios for a bunch of idiots. Their job is to save your life. It is normal that their advice is NO HEAVY LIFTING when aorta is at risk because not everyone knows how to master the last fancy technique developed but those oily gym guy, and even some of those guys that pretend to master it could do it slightly wrong.
And the gyms guys are not the only guy lifting, you have guys like me that can lift for 10 hours in the bush, with other objectives than growing muscles and listening to their body, for example making money, being productive, so you can add a stress factor to that. You have the unexperienced that have no clue how to lift ( most of the people) So cardio as a general rule do not ignore techniques like yours but they look at the general population and decide to advice : "slow down on heavy lifting but dont go back to a sedentary life either". Like Pellicle said :
|and these people are usually not trained in lifting nor breathing.
Thus the heart attacks shovelling snow.
In this case, the poster is an unexperienced heavy lifter and in your first post, you tell him to not worry about heavy lifting without mentioning your technique, what a ****** advice, good thing I brought the debate here
MethodAir;n862621 said:
I don't see anything alarming there. And your BP is normal. If there was such a strong correlation between heavy lifting and ascending aortic aneurysm, strongmen, powerlifters and bodybuilders would be dropping like flies. But they aren't. Live your life, and get periodic check ups.