Lower Stroke Risk In Women Who Walk Regularly
April 30, 2010 by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Heart Disease, Obesity / Weight Loss / Fitness, Stroke, Women's Health / Gynecology
Filed under: Heart Disease, Obesity / Weight Loss / Fitness, Stroke, Women's Health / Gynecology
Women who walked two or more hours a week or who usually walked at a brisk pace (3 miles per hour or faster) had a significantly lower risk of stroke than women who didn’t walk, according to a large, long-term study reported in Stroke: Journal of the American Heart Association.
The risks were lower for total stroke, clot-related (ischemic) stroke and bleeding (hemorrhagic) stroke, researchers said.
Compared to women who didn’t walk:
- Women who usually walked at a brisk pace had a 37 percent lower risk of any type of stroke and those who walked two or more hours a week had a 30 percent lower risk of any type of stroke.
- Women who typically walked at a brisk pace had a 68 percent lower risk of hemorrhagic stroke and those who walked two or more hours a week had a 57 percent lower risk of hemorrhagic stroke.
- Women who usually walked at a brisk pace had a 25 percent lower risk of ischemic stroke and those who usually walked more than two hours a week had a 21 percent lower risk of ischemic stroke – both “borderline significant,” according to researchers.

