This article may be of interest for those who have a pool available and enjoy being in the water. If you have fibromyalgia, this may be something you can try.
Water Aerobics May Ease Fibromyalgia
Fibromyalgia Patients Report Better Quality of Life After
Starting Water Aerobics
Feb. 21, 2008 -- Living with fibromyalgia may get better when patients work
out in a pool.
That's according to new fibromyalgia
research from Spain, which reports that water aerobics "enhances the
health-related quality of life in women with fibromyalgia."
The researchers studied 33 women with fibromyalgia who were leading sedentary
lives. The women, who were 37 to 71 years old, were split into two groups.
Women in one group were assigned to take part in a water aerobics program.
They worked out together in a warm, waist-deep pool for an hour, three times per
week, for eight months. An instructor guided them through a warm-up, strength
exercises, aerobics, and a cool-down period during each workout.
For comparison, the women in the other group kept their sedentary habits.
Before anyone dipped a toe in a pool, and again at the end of the study, the
women rated their quality of life. Quality-of-life ratings rose for women in the
water aerobics group. Not so for the idle women; their quality-of-life ratings
bobbed along at the same low level.
What mattered more -- working out at all, or working out in the water? The
study doesn't settle that question.
But the researchers -- who included sports scientist Narcis Gusi, PhD, of
Spain's University of Extremadura -- note that walking and low-impact aerobic
exercise might be alternatives for fibromyalgia patients without pool
access.
The findings appear in today's online edition of Arthritis Research &
Therapy.
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