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Fitness on the Wire: Cold Weather Muscles

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CARSON CITY, Nev. — Cold weather exercise has its drawbacks. Some of the drawbacks are mental. But a lot of them are physical. Cold stiff muscles don’t lend themselves to quick fitness and sports moves. A person’s range of motion also takes a big dip when it’s cold.

The human body functions best within a very narrow range of outside temperature, usually between 65 and 75 degrees with a humidity reading of about 45 percent. The further you get from this ideal temperature range, the harder it becomes for your body to compensate.

When temperatures are quite cold, the blood vessels leading to your skin, hands, and feet constrict in order to minimize blood flow and body heat loss through these surfaces. When the body begins to shiver it generates heat, but, when these reactions to cold occur, it means that your body is stressed. Your heart and pulse rates increase, and your body chemistry changes.

When outside temperatures drop significantly, your muscles become numb and stiff and appendages become less cooperative and can malfunction, exposing yourself to injury. Other factors affecting muscle control and movement that can accentuate the body’s reaction to cold temperatures are alcohol and some types of drugs. .

If you exercise indoors during winter weather, wear light clothing, drink plenty of water and prepare your cold muscles with an easy jog in place. If you do your exercise outdoors, wear layers of clothing and remove layers as you become warm and loose. Keep your legs warm and rotate your ankles before and after your workout. Lightly stretch calf, hamstring and thigh muscles if you jog. Long extended stretches before your workout are not a good idea when the temperature is 30 degrees. Wear a hat if your exercise is outdoors; forty percent of heat loss is through the head.

If you are breathing in cold air while you jog, wrap a warm scarf around your mouth, and breathe through it now and then to warm up your respiratory tract.

A little preparation for those cold, stiff muscles is all it takes to keep you sweating through the cold months.

— Carson City fitness expert Jerry Vance is a regular contributor to Carson Now.


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