Sex can often be a pleasurable experience. But it also has benefits some
reports have compared to those of exercise. So can sex really count as a
workout?
Sex
isn’t only a pleasurable experience, with some reports
claiming the act also has health
benefits that can be compared to those of exercise.
In fact,
the physiological response to sex is similar to that of exercise. Landmark
studies in the 1960s showed people having sex had an increase
in their respiratory rate, heart rate, and blood pressure.
These
are all signs the body is working at an elevated rate, similar to that
experienced during exercise.
More
recently, these findings have been replicated
by a number of researchers using less
obtrusive, miniaturized and wireless equipment, enabling more realistic
results.
Again,
they found a significant increase in markers of physiological stress, such as
heart rate and blood pressure. Comparing this to what happens during exercise,
they showed sexual activity elicits a moderate level of physical stress
— up to 75 percent of maximal exercise.
But they
also noticed these physiological stress levels were intermittent. Much of the
average time of sexual activity recorded (33 minutes) was spent at lower stress
levels.
A more
recent study of young Canadian heterosexual couples showed
a bout of sexual activity was akin to
moderate physical activity (such as brisk walking) when energy expenditure was
measured.
Sex is
kind of like exercise
So sex
is exercise? Well yes and no. It depends on your definition of exercise. If you
compare the two purely by the physiological change that occurs, then yes,
because sex elicits a change in human physiology akin to exercise.
But if
you believe exercise should change human physiology for the better, in the long
term, then perhaps no. This is because, for most of us, sex isn’t sustained
long enough nor occurs frequently enough for a true physiological change to
happen in the long term.
Also, we
haven’t really explored the other benefits of exercise and contrasted them with
sex. For instance, muscular health is recognized as a major component of a
person’s health.
We know
lots about gaining muscular health through resistance training and other
exercises. But does sex give enough of a workout to change muscular health?
Well… I sense a research project in the pipeline.
The
studies mentioned above also reported a distinct difference between responses
in males and female participants. The reasons for this difference
— whether men are more physically active during sex compared to women or
whether different sexual positions place a greater demand on the human body
— have yet to be explored.
What
about masturbation? Increases in heart rate and systolic blood pressure have been reported during
masturbation. But both the level and duration of these increases weren’t as
high or long as with intercourse.
Judging
by measurements of heart rate, masturbation really only equates to light
exercise, such as slow walking.
How
exercise affects sex and vice versa
In many
cases, exercise can also be helpful to sex. Research into pelvic floor
exercises in women with pelvic pain, for instance, has shown they improve sexual function. Women reported
increased control, confidence, heightened sensation and less pain.
While in
men, exercises that train the perineal
muscles in front of the anus help with premature ejaculation.
And what
about how sex affects exercise? Should professional athletes, for instance,
refrain from sex before a competition?
Not if
they wait long enough after sex. Sex
has been shown to have no negative effect on sports performance but can have a
negative effect on recovery if you compete within two hours of having it. This
means athletes could take longer to recover from one bout of exercise to
another.
So in
answer to the question of whether sex is really exercise. Kind of. But you can
test it out for yourself and see how you feel.
Medical daily
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