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Biomedicine

Volume: 42 Issue: 4

  • Open Access
  • Short communications/brief reports

Exercise habits and cortisol level among women at a local Zumba club

Dyah G. Rambu Kareri1, Derri R. Tallo Manafe2, I. Nyoman Sasputra3

1Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 2Department of Physiology, 3Department of Anatomical Pathology, Faculty of Medicine and Veterinary Science, Universitas Nusa Cendana, Indonesia

Corresponding author: Dyah G. Rambu Kareri. Email: [email protected]

Year: 2022, Page: 820-822, Doi: https://doi.org/10.51248/.v42i4.1765

Abstract

Introduction and Aim: Cortisol has a vital role in helping the body deal with stress. It is known as the primary stress hormone. Cortisol modulates many changes in the body in response to stress, including blood sugar (glucose) metabolism, fat, protein, carbohydrate metabolism into energy (gluconeogenesis), immune and anti-inflammatory response. The aim of this study was to determine the impact of Zumba exercise on cortisol levels in Zumba club participants in Indonesia.
Materials and Methods: The design of the research is observational analytic using a cross-sectional analytic study method. The samples in this study were 25 women of productive age in the I'M Z crew Zumba club in Indonesia with a purposive amplification technique.
Results: The results showed that the subjects who routinely did Zumba exercise (≥ 3x a week) or who did not excercie routinely (1-2x a week) to have cortisol levels within normal limits (3.09-16.66 ug/dL). The results of this study also showed that subjects who routinely did Zumba exercise (≥ 3x a week) to have higher cortisol mean (7.82 ± 3.50) than subjects who did not regularly exercise (1-2x a week; 6.47 ± 3.46).
Conclusion: There was no significant relationship between exercise habits and cortisol levels in the research subjects (p=0.346).

Keywords: Cortisol; Zumba; exercise; stress.

Cite this article

Dyah G. Rambu Kareri, Derri R. Tallo Manafe, I. Nyoman Sasputra. Exercise habits and cortisol level among women at a local Zumba club. Biomedicine: 2022; 42(4): 820-822

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