Edition: U.S. | Arabic | Set Pref
  • E-mail
  • Save
89 Stories on Exercise and Fitness
Search this topic

Time.com: Exercise May Prevent Future Breast Cancer

Get your daughters off the couch: New research shows exercise during the teen years -- starting as young as age 12 -- can help protect girls from breast cancer when they're grown

Early exercise aids against breast cancer

New research shows exercise during the teen years -- starting as young as age 12 -- can help protect girls from breast cancer when they are grown.

Yoga's appeal broadening to disability community

A middle-aged woman arrives at yoga class, a guide dog beside her wheelchair. She slides onto a mat on the floor and begins warming up with help from the instructor, stretching her knee and leg muscles to the side.

Americans, time to warm up for Nintendo's Wii Fit

Despite just being released in December, Wii Fit already has sold 1.76 million copies in Japan and is the best-selling game of the year ending March 31.

Fat to fitness instructor: Boot camp helps man lose 120 pounds

Two years ago, Tim Lenczowski dreaded walking from the parking lot into his office.

Teacher loses 120 pounds, drops seven dress sizes

Hardly a day that goes by that you won't find Tracey Wygal working out at the gym.

Quitting can be good for you

I call my friend Betsy "Besty" for two reasons: first, because she's one of the best-beloved people in my life, and second, because anything she tries, she does better than anyone else in the world.

SI.com: Steroids In America: The Godfather

Once upon a time, elite athletes who took extreme doses of anabolic steroids were sure that the drugs helped them jump higher, run faster, grow stronger. But these notions had never been verified in a lab. So in 1975 a British physiology professor at the University of Leeds, G. Romaine Hervey, set up an experiment to determine whether high doses of steroids truly boosted athletic performance or just gave users a psychological edge. "We knew young men who lifted weights felt that anabolic steroids helped them lift more, but we really didn't know [if they did]," says Hervey, now 83. "And since steroids did seem to make them bigger, we wanted to see whether that was normal muscle or water or something else."

Riding, walking to work builds fitness into day

Lois Fletcher started taking the subway to work nine months ago to save money. It turned out to be an excellent way for her to lose weight -- more than 30 pounds to be exact.

Jobs that keep you in shape

Over the years, countless magazine articles have promised you could "lose weight at work" or "tone up in 10 minutes at your desk."

Advertisement
Home  |  Asia  |  Europe  |  U.S.  |  World  |  World Business  |  Technology  |  Entertainment  |  World Sport  |  Travel
Podcasts  |  Blogs  |  CNN Mobile  |  RSS Feeds  |  Email Alerts  |  CNN Radio  |  CNNAvantGo  |  Site Map
© 2008 Cable News Network. A Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved.