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posted by martyb on Sunday October 04 2015, @01:34AM   Printer-friendly
from the use-only-as-directed dept.

Everyone knows that exercise improves health, and ongoing research continues to uncover increasingly detailed information on its benefits for metabolism, circulation, and improved functioning of organs such as the heart, brain, and liver. With this knowledge in hand, scientists may be better equipped to develop "exercise pills" that could mimic at least some of the beneficial effects of physical exercise on the body. But a review of current development efforts, publishing October 2 in Trends in Pharmacological Sciences, ponders whether such pills will achieve their potential therapeutic impact, at least in the near future.

"We have recognized the need for exercise pills for some time, and this is an achievable goal based on our improved understanding of the molecular targets of physical exercise," says coauthor Ismail Laher, of the Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.

Several laboratories are developing exercise pills, which at this early stage are being tested in animals to primarily target skeletal muscle performance and improve strength and energy use—essentially producing stronger and faster muscles. But of course the benefits of exercise are far greater than its effects on only muscles.

Couch potatoes would rejoice, of course, but exercise pills could also benefit the bed-ridden or astronauts who spend extended periods in microgravity.


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  • (Score: 1) by throwaway28 on Sunday October 04 2015, @05:56AM

    by throwaway28 (5181) on Sunday October 04 2015, @05:56AM (#245038) Journal

    Having broken or damaged countless objects in the past -- one of the most surprising, was breaking a small pair of wire cutters trying to cut something too thick -- knowing when to hold back and not use strength, is a very important component of owning strength. If you suddenly tripled or quintupled your own strength, without exercise and without practice, how long would it take to get used to it ? How many times would you trip and fall, or accidentally walk through a wall*, just because you don't know how much force to use anymore ?

    * for example, http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0405325/ [imdb.com] (Sky High, 2005)