male jogger with fitness tracker attached to arm running

Exercise makes new heart cells

The human heart has the capacity to regenerate itself. But it is at quite a low capacity. Young adults can renew one percent of their heart muscles every year, and this decreases with age.

Losing heart cells is linked to heart failure. Thus, finding interventions which can increase new heart cell formation is important and can help prevent heart failure.

We know that exercise is good for our heart health and researchers decided to test whether exercise can enhance the regenerative capacity of the heart.

A balance between loss of heart muscles due to injury or ageing and the regeneration of healthy heart cells results in a health heart and exercise is one way to make sure that the heart remains healthy.

To test this, the researchers gave one group of healthy mice eight weeks access to  monitored voluntary wheel running. Left on their own the mice ran five kilometres each day.

The other healthy group of mice remained sedentary.

The researchers then administered a labelled chemical which was introduced into a newly made DNA as cells prepared to divide.

They followed the labelled DNA in the heart muscle and they could see where the new cells were being produced.

To test this further and to see if the heart regenerated after a heart attack, the researchers found that after experiencing a heart attack the mice with wheel running access continued to run five kilometres a day voluntarily. Compared to the sedentary mice, this group of mice showed an increase in the area of heart tissue where new muscle cells were made.

This showed that exercise results in significant regeneration of the heart tissue.

A balance between loss of heart muscles due to injury or ageing and the regeneration of healthy heart cells results in a healthy heart and exercise is one way to make sure that the heart remains healthy.

Not only does exercise help the heart make new heart cells under normal circumstances but also after a heart attack.

Exercise is good for the heart and now we know why.

Source: Nature Communications

Meena Azzollini

Meena Azzollini

Meena is passionate about holistic wellbeing, alternative healing, health and personal power and uses words to craft engaging feature articles to convey her knowledge and passion. She is a freelance writer and content creator from Adelaide, Australia, who draws inspiration from family, travel and her love for books and reading.

A yoga practitioner and a strong believer in positive thinking, Meena is also a mum to a very active young boy. In her spare time, she loves to read and whip up delicious meals. She also loves the smell of freshly made coffee and can’t ever resist a cheesecake. And she gets tickled pink by anything funny!

You May Also Like

Wellbeing & Eatwell Cover Image 1001x667

Balance, Boxing & Resistance Bands

Emf Protection Woman Headphones Smiling Avelino Calvar Martinez Scaled

EMF Damage – How to protect yourself from it

tennis flow

Plyometric tennis flow

Wellbeing & Eatwell Cover Image 1001x667 2024 05 01t104739.731

Running Drills