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Extreme exercises are usually performed by sport people who have tendency to put drugs into their mouth**Yes, regular exercise significantly reduces the risk of stroke.** Your daily cycling routine of at least an hour is an excellent habit that likely provides strong protective benefits.
### Key Evidence
Multiple studies, meta-analyses, and health organizations (including the CDC, American Heart Association, and others) consistently show that physical activity lowers stroke risk through several mechanisms:
- **Risk reduction**: Moderate-intensity aerobic activity is linked to a **20–25%** lower risk of stroke (including ischemic and hemorrhagic types) compared to inactivity. Some research indicates even greater reductions—up to **40–60%** with consistent moderate-to-vigorous activity (e.g., 30–60 minutes daily).
- **Dose-response effect**: More activity generally equals greater benefit, though even modest amounts (e.g., 30 minutes most days) help. Your hour of daily cycling far exceeds typical guidelines.
- **Independent benefits**: Exercise helps even beyond weight control—it lowers blood pressure, improves cholesterol, reduces inflammation, enhances blood flow and vascular health, helps control blood sugar, and supports heart function.
Cycling specifically is a great aerobic activity that improves cardiovascular fitness, aids weight management, and is joint-friendly. Studies on commuters and regular cyclists show lower risks of heart disease, stroke, and related mortality.
### Recommended Guidelines
Health authorities recommend:
- At least **150 minutes** (2.5 hours) of moderate-intensity aerobic activity per week (or 75 minutes vigorous), spread across days.
- Plus muscle-strengthening activities on 2+ days per week.
Your routine (≈7+ hours/week of cycling) comfortably meets and exceeds this, which is associated with the strongest risk reductions.
### Additional Context
- Benefits apply across ages and sexes.
- Consistency matters most—lifelong habits yield the best protection.
- Exercise also improves outcomes if a stroke occurs and aids recovery.
**Important note**: While highly beneficial, exercise is one piece of stroke prevention. Other key factors include managing blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes, not smoking, healthy diet, limited alcohol, and good sleep. Consult a doctor for personalized advice, especially if you have other risk factors or health conditions. Keep up the great work with your cycling!
If put drugs into mouth and expect nothing happens is an ignorance
Generally, exercise don’t kill anyone