6 simple ways to keep your lungs healthy

July 28, 2015

What, you're wondering, could you possibly do beyond quitting smoking to get your bellows in better shape? The answer: plenty.

6 simple ways to keep your lungs healthy

If you want to be able to blow out all the candles on your cake when you're 75 (assuming your family dares to put on a candle for every year), not to mention climb three flights of stairs without needing oxygen, now is the time to take action.

1. Have a heart-to-heart with your sleeping partner

The key question to ask: do I snore? If the answer is yes, make an appointment with your GP and ask for a referral to a sleep centre to get checked for sleep apnea.

  • This condition, in which someone stops breathing dozens or even hundreds of times during the night, can actually damage the lungs nearly as much as smoking. Fortunately, it's treatable.

2. Make several trips upstairs every day

  • The kind of exercise that makes your heart beat faster, such as climbing stairs, riding a bike or walking briskly, is very important for keeping your heart and lungs in good shape.
  • For instance, studies find that walking for about 15 minutes at a time, three to four times a day, improved breathing in people with the lung disease emphysema.

3. Breathe from your abdomen

  • This kind of breathing, called diaphragmatic breathing, involves training and strengthening your diaphragm so that it requires less effort to take in each breath.
  • To do it, inhale deeply through your nose, filling your lungs from the bottom up.
  • If you're doing it right, your stomach will push out. Exhale and repeat.

4. Expand your chest like a cocky rooster

  • To help your chest to expand and boost your lung capacity, lie on your back with your knees bent and your feet flat on the floor.
  • Place your hands behind your head and bring your elbows together so they're nearly touching.
  • As you inhale, let your elbows drop to the sides slowly so your arms are flat on the floor when your lungs are full.
  • As you exhale, raise your elbows again.

5. Read the fine print on household cleaners

  • Some products, such as oven cleaner, can be toxic if inhaled.
  • If the instructions say to open a window or use in a well-ventilated space, make sure you do so. And wear a face mask when working around toxic dust or fumes.
  • Even simple household tasks such as sanding paint could send damaging fragments into your lungs.

6. Say no to dessert

  • A study has revealed that carrying extra weight makes your respiratory muscles work harder and less efficiently.
  • This results in shortness of breath, making it hard to exercise, which makes it hard to lose the weight.
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