Charles Emery

Charles Emery
begins body exercise experience fact hurting lead obese pain severe
This is important because if an obese person begins an exercise program, he may not cognitively experience pain when in fact it is hurting the body on some level. That could lead to severe pain down the road.
found group levels looked lower obese objective pain people similar subjective threshold
For subjective indicators of pain, obese people indicated similar levels of pain to non-obese people. But when we looked at objective indicators, we found that the obese group had a lower threshold for pain.
both cope groups helped higher lower obese pain physical procedure relaxation tests threshold tolerating
The relaxation procedure helped both groups cope with pain. Additionally, our tests showed both groups had higher physical pain thresholds after the relaxation session. But the obese participants still had a lower threshold for tolerating the pain.
both cope groups helped procedure relaxation
The relaxation procedure helped both groups cope with pain.
asking evaluation objective opposed response simply ways
This kind of evaluation is in some ways a more objective way of measuring the body's response to pain, as opposed to simply asking someone if they feel pain.
associated document time
This is the first time we've been able to document this kind of enhancement associated with exercise.
less obese people studies tolerant
Some studies say that obese people are more tolerant of pain, while other studies say they are less tolerant.
body importance looking objective pain responds subjective
Our findings show the importance of looking at objective as well as subjective measurements of how the body responds to pain stimuli.
exercise healing helps hormones immune increases influence regulate system
Exercise increases circulation and helps regulate the immune system and hormones that influence the healing process.
both current effect enhanced exercise found healing indicate older rate represents studies study truly wound
The findings from both studies indicate that the effect of exercise we found in the current study truly represents an enhanced rate of wound healing in older adults.