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Exercise

Exercise image
Parent Issue
Day
11
Month
November
Year
1891
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

While the elderly man has less capacity for some forma of exercise than the younger adult, he has no less need than the other of the general and local effects of exercise. It is in the earhest period of mature age that the most characteristio manifestations of defect of nutrltion - obesity, gout and diabetes, in which lack of exercise playa an important part - are produced; and the treatment of them demands imperiously a stirring up of the vital combustiĆ³n. Placed between a conviction that exercise is necessary, and a fear of the dangers of exercise, the mature man ought; therefore, to proceed with the strictest method in the application of this powerful modifler of nutrition. It is impossible, however, to trace methodically a single rule for all men of the same age, for all do not offer the same degreo ol preservation. We might, perhaps, find a general formula for the ago at which the muscles and bones havo retained all their power of resistaoce, and at which the heart and vesicles begin to lose tome of their capacity to perform their functions. The mature man can safely brave all exercise that brings on muscular fatigue, but he must approach with great care those which

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Courier