Born to run … but also to walk. Motor activity: the first pillar of human evolution.

Authors

  • Alessandro Capitanini Nefrologia e Dialisi Ospedale di Pistoia, Azienda Sanitaria Toscana Centro, Italy
  • David Mariani Healthy Habits Academy Director, Italy

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33393/gcnd.2019.511

Keywords:

Evolution, Physical exercise, Lifestyle, Sedentariety, Chronic diseases, Endurance activity, Strenght exercises, Prevention

Abstract

Our evolution has been based on the ability of moving in order to find food, escape or fight. Afterwards, the first social organizations reduced the risk of aggressions by predators by allowing a shared hunting activity and collection of foods determining, this way, less energy required lifestyle. Thanks to the subsequent progresses in human society, we have therefore moved from hunting and agriculture to industrialization. For about seventy years, an apparently unstoppable progression towards a sedentary lifestyle has been going on, with a gradual loss of some of our body’s functions, up to the so-called "disuse syndrome". The change can also be observed in the type of prevalent pathologies: from acute/infectious/transmissible/epidemic, to chronic/degenerative/dysmetabolic and, unfortunately, increasingly pandemic. Therefore, physical activity can be both a preventive and therapeutic solution. (Healthy_habits)

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Published

2019-05-29

How to Cite

Capitanini, A., & Mariani, D. (2019). Born to run … but also to walk. Motor activity: the first pillar of human evolution. Giornale Di Clinica Nefrologica E Dialisi, 31(2), 142–145. https://doi.org/10.33393/gcnd.2019.511

Issue

Section

Healthy habits

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