
Health Studies Hub
Your go-to source for daily breakdowns of the latest health, fitness, and nutrition research.
Isometric Training Builds Muscle Effectively.
In 2019, Dustin J. Oranchuk and a team from Auckland University of Technology reviewed 26 studies with 713 participants on isometric training's long-term effects. They looked at how muscle length, intensity, and intent affect adaptations like muscle size, strength, and architecture over 3-14 weeks.
Daily Walking Cuts Chronic Back Pain Risk.
In 2025, Paul Jarle Mork and a team from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology studied 11,194 adults over time. They tracked walking habits and lower back problems, comparing those who walked more to those who walked less, focusing on daily minutes rather than speed.
High-Intensity Exercise Cuts Depression by 20-30%.
In 2025, J. Zeng and a team from China reviewed 9 randomized trials with 514 adults battling depression. They compared high-intensity exercise (like intense running or weight lifting) to control groups, measuring depression with standard scales like the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD). Workouts lasted from weeks to months.
Vitamin D And Exercise : The Ultimate Team to Protect Aging Brains.
In 2025, Jingfeng Chen and a team from Chinese universities reviewed animal and human studies on how vitamin D and exercise together help keep brains healthy as people age. They looked at things like brain growth proteins, blood flow, and swelling in the brain, focusing on older adults with memory problems.
Exercise Slows Aging Clock in Multiple Organs.
In 2025, Takuji Kawamura and a team from Tohoku University reviewed studies on how exercise affects epigenetic aging, which shows how fast your body ages at the DNA level. They looked at human and animal research, focusing on structured workouts like running or weightlifting, using epigenetic clocks to measure DNA changes in blood, muscles, and other organs.
Two Workouts Target Root Cause of Most Diseases.
In 2023, Mark Hyman from the UltraWellness Center reviewed research on mitochondria, the cell powerhouses that convert food to energy. They decline with age, causing fatigue, brain fog, muscle weakness, and inflammation linked to diseases like Parkinson's, diabetes, heart disease, and cancer. Exercise triggers mitophagy, clearing damaged mitochondria, with studies showing 20-30% better mitochondrial function in active people vs. sedentary.
Exercise and Yogurt Cut Inflammation in Young Men.
In 2025, Emily C. Fraschetti and a team from York University studied 30 healthy young males in a 12-week trial. They did resistance and plyometric exercises twice weekly, with half consuming Greek yogurt (20g protein) and half an isoenergy carb pudding post-workout. They measured inflammation markers like IL-6, TNF-α, and CRP in blood at start, 6 weeks, and end.
Exercise Boosts Sleep Quality for Insomnia Sufferers.
In 2022, a team reviewed six studies with 295 adults to see how exercise helps insomnia. They found that regular workouts, like walking or yoga, improved sleep quality and cut insomnia severity by 20-30%, making it easier to fall and stay asleep.
Exercise 1.5 Times Better Than Drugs for Mental Health.
In 2023, Ben Singh and a team reviewed 97 meta-analyses covering 1,039 trials with 128,119 adults to compare exercise against psychotherapy or medications for mental health issues like depression and anxiety. They looked at various workouts—brisk walking, weights, yoga—measuring effects on mood, stress, and brain chemicals.
Squats Outshine Leg Press for Strength Gains.
In 2018, Fabrício E. Rossi and a team studied 30 adults randomly assigned to three groups: back squat only, leg press only, or both, for 10 weeks of twice-weekly lower body workouts. Each group did 6 sets of 8-12 reps with 90-120 seconds rest, keeping other training the same. They measured max squat strength, body composition, jump height, and balance.
Sore Muscles Don’t Guarantee Muscle Growth.
In 2016, Sal Di Stefano from Mind Pump Media reviewed what sore muscles mean for fitness, drawing on exercise science. He explained that soreness, often linked to inflammation or lactic acid buildup, happens when you try new workouts or push too hard, not necessarily from effective training. For example, even advanced lifters get sore from unfamiliar activities like swimming, but this doesn’t mean better muscle gains.
Exercise Reduces Addiction Withdrawal by Up To 50%.
In 2023, Hao Li and a team from China reviewed 22 randomized trials with 1,537 people battling substance use disorder. They explored how light, moderate, and high-intensity workouts like walking, jogging, or weight lifting reduce withdrawal symptoms such as cravings, depression, anxiety, and insomnia during detox.
30-Minute Workout Slashes Cancer Cell Growth by 30%.
In 2025, Francesco Bettariga and a team from Edith Cowan University studied breast cancer survivors. They tested a single 30-minute session of resistance training (like weights) or high-intensity interval training (HIIT), measuring myokines—proteins from muscles that fight cancer. Blood samples were taken before, right after, and 30 minutes post-workout to see effects on cancer cells in a lab.
Workouts Rival Medications for Depression Relief.
In 2021, Yumeng Xie and a team from Renmin Hospital of Wuhan University reviewed many studies on how exercise helps people with depression. They looked at different kinds of workouts like running, swimming, or yoga, and how they change brain chemicals, reduce swelling, and improve mood. Exercise works by boosting happy brain signals like serotonin and dopamine, growing new brain cells, and cutting down harmful stress.
Ear-Clip Vagus Nerve Stimulation Boosts Fitness.
In 2025, GL Ackland and team conducted a randomized, double-blind, crossover trial with 28 healthy adults. They tested a non-invasive ear-clip device delivering gentle electrical pulses to the vagus nerve for 30 minutes daily over one week, compared to a sham device, with a two-week washout period. Exercise capacity (VO2peak), heart rate, breathing rate, and inflammation markers were measured.
Juice Powder Plus Exercise Cuts Inflammation in Obese Women.
In 2013, Manfred Lamprecht and team from Graz, Austria, studied 34 obese women in a 12-week trial. They split them into four groups: one got a fruit/vegetable juice powder concentrate, another got the powder plus exercise, a third just exercised, and the last got a placebo. They measured inflammation, oxidative stress, and blood flow markers.
Just Two Workouts a Week Cut Heart Death Risk in Diabetics.
In 2025, a study from AnnalsofIM and others tracked 50,000+ adults with diabetes over years, using health records to compare exercise habits. They grouped people as inactive, insufficiently active, weekend warriors (≥150 min/week in 1–2 sessions), or regularly active, measuring heart-related deaths and overall mortality.
It’s Never Too Late to Add Years to Your Life—Just Move More.
A 2025 study analyzing 85 previous studies found that people who stay consistently active have a 30–40% lower risk of early death—especially from heart disease. Even those who start exercising later in life still see a 20–25% drop in mortality risk, showing it’s never too late to change your future.
Your Personality Type Could Be Sabotaging Your Fitness Goals.
A July 2025 UCL study in Frontiers in Psychology found that when people choose exercise types suited to their personality, they enjoy workouts more and experience greater stress relief than mismatched routines.
“Eat Your Protein And Lift Weights.”
“Eat Your Protein And Lift Weights. I'd say from a simple standpoint, those are the two most important things.” ~Danica Patrick