Baby on Board
The only moment Paula Radcliffe seems to carry any body fat is when she’s toting around her 9-month-old daughter around. Mothers, new and old alike, are still in awe by the British marathoner’s ability to win the renowned NYC marathon months after giving birth. The AP reports that she ran the 26.2 miles in 2 hours and 23 minutes (we’ve sat through football games that weekend that lasted longer) just 291 days after delivering little Isla. While running a marathon is an achievement for anyone, preggers or not, her accomplishment has stirred up debate on just how much exercise is safe for mommies-to-be.
Some docs feel that for ladies in tip-top shape to start with, continuing their current level of activity into the early months of pregnancy should be fine as lengthy as they cut back in the later stages and resume after giving birth. Those same docs ask that sofa potatoes and weekend-warriors try not to engage in new strenuous work-out programs where they may overdo it as they feel the pregnancy pounds accumulating. (See more here.)
However, most physicians are not convinced on how much exercise is unsafe,
Strangely some of the physical changes involved with pregnancy, such as increased blood flow, may improve physical performance. But an enlarged stomach can shift a woman’s center of gravity and increased hormones swimming through the bloodstream may lead to looser and more easily injured ligaments and joints. Thus, the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecologists encourages more low affect exercises for the expectant, including swimming, walking, and yoga.
Original post by Kapil Desai
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