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Wednesday, October 15, 2025

Which Promotes Vascular Health More?

For many, modern life has turned into a chair-bound marathon. Footsteps fade, finger taps rise, and prolonged stillness emerges as a silent threat to public health. Such sedentary lifestyles are fueling a surge in chronic illnesses, including heart disease, diabetes, obesity, and cancer. Beneath the surface, the body’s metabolic machinery falters: insulin loses its edge, blood vessels stiffen, and lipid profiles go rogue.

Vascular function is your body’s blood-flow choreography. It’s how vessels stretch, flex, and respond to deliver oxygen, clear waste, and keep your heart’s rhythm smooth. When the inner lining (endothelium) leads gracefully and arteries stay limber, your cardiovascular health hits all the right notes. In other words, vascular function can help predict the risk of future cardiovascular problems.

Movement is medicine, but which kind?

While aerobic and resistance workouts are the usual prescription, yoga is stepping into the spotlight with its blend of poses, breathwork, and mindfulness. Yet, the jury’s still out. Some studies say yoga didn’t budge key artery metrics in inactive older adults, while others saw yoga benefits for hypertensive postmenopausal women.

A recent study from the University of Sharjah compares yoga and conventional exercise, measuring the impact on vascular function using ultrasound in sedentary individuals.

Surprisingly, the results challenge the popular narrative, finding yoga may not actually be as effective as traditional workouts in boosting vascular health. While both aim to get the blood flowing, it seems that sweat-inducing routines might have the upper hand in keeping arteries supple and responsive.

This study zooms in on a pool of published data, methodically analyzing randomized controlled trials (RCTs), controlled clinical trials (CCTs), and comparative studies to ensure a rigorous and evidence-based approach. It assessed vascular function using high-precision ultrasound tools such as flow-mediated dilation (FMD) and pulse wave velocity (PWV).

Co-author Dr. Leena David, a medical diagnostic imaging specialist and lecturer at the University of Sharjah, likens blood vessels to flexible garden hoses, emphasizing that when they lose their elasticity, the risk of cardiovascular events, such as heart attacks and strokes, rises.

“The study shows that structured exercise keeps those hoses flexible, while yoga provides some benefits but not as reliably,” David explained. “Middle-aged and older adults often notice improvements from yoga, but younger adults might not.”

The review lined up 10 studies, half exploring yoga, half diving into diverse exercise routines. On one side: Hatha, Bikram, and Vinyasa yoga, mostly US-based, gently nudging sedentary adults (18–70 years) into 8–12 weeks of mindful movement, tracked through vascular metrics like arterial compliance and pulse wave velocity.

On the other, a mixed bag of motion: Tai Chi’s flow, Pilates’ precision, HIIT’s intensity, and even quick desk-bound wiggles. These exercise interventions ranged from one-off bursts to 24-week marathons, each testing how far a little movement can go in reviving vascular vitality.

Yoga interventions showed uneven results. Some studies found yoga helps improve endothelial function, particularly in older adults. But others saw no significant shifts in how flexible or responsive arteries become, even after a few months of steady practice. The effects appear to depend on age, baseline health, and the body’s response to gentle movement.

Meanwhile, exercise interventions yielded more consistent muscle gains. Tai Chi and Reformer Pilates improved endothelial function, while high-intensity interval training (HIIT), especially in cold settings, helped maintain the suppleness of arteries.

The findings indicate exercise, especially aerobic workouts with guidance, helps blood vessels work better. But don’t count on those quick desk stretches – micro-breaks during long sitting spells offered minimal vascular perks. This suggests the intensity and duration of your exercise matter more; your blood vessels need more than a quick stretch to truly thrive.

The authors note that for sedentary individuals, structured exercise programs tend to show more consistent improvements in vascular function than yoga. However, for some yoga can still be really helpful, especially in middle-aged and older adults, where its benefits are more reliably evident.

The findings highlight that one-size-fits-all approaches do not work for vascular health. Clinicians should consider a patient’s age, their initial vascular condition, and the type of intervention, whether it’s yoga, aerobic exercise, or another approach, before prescribing lifestyle changes. Personalization seems to be key to better outcomes.

David points out that “even simple routines can make arteries more resilient,” explaining that “blood vessels have a memory, and every workout helps them forget the damage of sitting all day.” She likens prolonged sitting to “the new smoking: silent, sneaky, and stealing years from your arteries,” and calls movement “the perfect antidote.”

Although yoga remains a culturally rich and accessible option, the study indicates it may fall short for consistent cardiovascular improvements. For optimal vascular benefits, more vigorous forms of exercise may be necessary.

The new study was published in Advances in Integrative Medicine.

Source: ScienceDaily

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