Exercise is good for your health, but a new study out Tuesday found  "clear evidence" of an increase in cardiovascular deaths in heart attack  survivors who exercise too much.
The study, published in the  U.S. journal Mayo Clinic Proceedings, analyzed the relationship between  exercise and cardiovascular disease-related deaths in about 2,400  physically active heart attack survivors. 
Remarkable reductions  in deaths from cardiovascular events were seen among patients who were  running less than 30 miles (about 48 kilometers) or walking less than 46  miles (about 74 kilometers) per week. 
Beyond this point, however, much of the benefit of exercise was lost, in what is described as a reverse J-curve pattern. 
"Results  suggest that the benefits of running or walking do not accrue  indefinitely and that above some level, perhaps 30 miles per week of  running, there is a significant increase in risk," said the study led by  Paul Williams of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and Paul  Thompson of the Hartford Hospital. 
"Competitive running events also appear to increase the risk of an acute event." 
However,  the researchers pointed out that as the study was based on heart attack  survivors, the findings cannot be readily generalized to the entire  population of heavy exercisers. 
The Physical Activity Guidelines  for Americans recommends about 150 minutes per week of  moderate-intensity exercise or about 75 minutes of vigorous-intensity  exercise. 
"For patients with heart disease, almost all should be  exercising, and generally most should be exercising 30-40 minutes most  days, but from a health stand-point, there is no reason to exercise much  longer than that and especially not more than 60 minutes on most days,"  said Carl Lavie, a cardiologist at the John Ochsner Heart and Vascular  Institute in New Orleans. 
"As Hippocrates said more than 2,000  years ago, 'if we could give every individual the right amount of  nourishment and exercise, not too little and not too much, we would have  found the safest way to health,'" he concluded. 
 
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