The Food, Exercise, and Digestion Connection Elizabethtown KY

Our bodies need enough stored energy to go for a jog, but no one wants spaghetti sloshing around in their stomach when they’re bouncing on the pavement. Jogging, though, is a high-impact exercise that jostles the stomach. While you don’t want to exercise on a full stomach, you do want to exercise to help stave off digestive problems stemming from food.

Muhammad A Memon, MD
270-765-4540
1107 Woodland Dr
Elizabethtown, KY
Saeed Ahmed
(270) 765-4540
1107 Woodland Dr
Elizabethtown, KY
Robert Kraft, MD
502-244-9608
18911 Ridgeleigh Ln
Louisville, KY
Abdul Jabbar, MD
502-852-6991
550 Jackson St,
Louisville, KY
Arthur Aung Gaing
(606) 327-1760
1200 Central Ave
Ashland, KY
Dr.Saeed Ahmed
(270) 765-4540
1107 Woodland Dr # 104
Elizabethtown, KY
Syddkashif B Haider
(270) 234-8866
2406 Ring Rd
Elizabethtown, KY
James Curtiss
(270) 393-4223
1325 Andrea St
Bowling Green, KY
Donald A Saelinger
(859) 781-2210
525 Alexandria Pike
Southgate, KY
Jeffrey K Riggs, DO
270-885-7300
1102 S Virginia St
Hopkinsville, KY
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The Food, Exercise, and Digestion Connection

Our bodies need enough stored energy to go for a jog, but no one wants spaghetti sloshing around in their stomach when they’re bouncing on the pavement. Jogging, though, is a high-impact exercise that jostles the stomach. While you don’t want to exercise on a full stomach, you do want to exercise to help stave off digestive problems stemming from food.

Food, exercise, and digestion are closely related. The digestive system is made up of organs that help the body change food into smaller molecules of nutrients before they’re absorbed into the blood and carried to cells throughout the body. When the system malfunctions, it can result in a gastrointestinal problem.

An example is constipation, which more than 4 million Americans have, according to the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK).1Constipation is having bowel movement less than 3 times per week, and it is most commonly caused by a lack of fiber in the diet and a lack of physical activity. Thus preventing constipation can be as simple as dietary and lifestyle changes. Professionals suggest:

  • Eating 20-35 grams of fiber per day, in the form of beans, fresh fruits, whole grain breads and cereals, and vegetables, like asparagus and carrots. Conversely, it is optimum to limit foods with little fiber, like ice cream, cheese, and meat.
  • Exercising lightly an hour after a meal. Accelerating your breathing and heart rate helps your intestinal muscles contract, which assists in quick, fluid, and efficient bowel movements.

Another problem related to the digestive system is heartburn, the primary symptom of gastroesophageal disease (GERD), which over 60 million Americans experience, according to the National Heartburn Alliance.2 The remedies here are different than for constipation. Three exercises that can reduce heartburn symptoms are:..

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