
"The Benefits of Exercise on Wellness
and Longevity of Life"
For years, the prevailing wisdom
was that men and women became weaker and weaker with age.
But more and more research has revealed the benefits of
exercise on not only a person's quality of life but also
their longevity.
The benefits of strength or resistance
training have been especially evident with elderly women.
Evidence has shown that even some of the frailest elderly
women can increase strength, balance and bone density.
One particular study, done at
Tufts University, looked at a group of women age 50 to 70
who began a moderate weight-training program. The women
lifted free weights twice a week for 40 minutes/session
and by the end of the study; the women had gained an average
of three pounds of muscle and lost about three pounds of
fat. Their strength increased an average of 75 percent and
their balance improved 14 percent. Bone density increased
by only about 1 percent, but the women in the control group,
who did no strength training, saw their bone density reduced
by more than 2 percent. Their improvements also made the
women feel stronger and more confident.
Another component of exercise,
aerobic fitness, has also been proven to be of significant
benefit toward quality of life. One 30-year old study found
that a six-month endurance-training program could reverse
the decline in cardiovascular fitness that occurs during
middle age. This study looked at men in their 20s and again
in their 50s. The study indicated that middle-aged men could
actually reverse many of the negative results of non-exercise,
even after being physically inactive for a long time. They
found that 100 percent of the age-related decline in aerobic
power that occurred over 30 years in these men was reversed
by six months of endurance training. Says Darren McGuire,
lead author of the study, "An endurance exercise program
using a relatively modest intensity of training was able
to return the group to the levels of aerobic power they
had 30 years before.
And for those people, who may
be at a higher mortality risk due to such things as cardiovascular
disease, exercise and physical fitness levels have been
shown to be the greatest predictor of how long someone might
live. Fitness "was the strongest predictor of mortality
that we found," said Dr. J. Edwin Atwood, a cardiologist
at the Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System. "If
you exercise and improve your exercise capacity, you will
increase your longevity."
These findings should be
a beacon of hope for all those people who wrongly assume
that reduced physical fitness is an inescapable part of
growing older. It also sends a strong message that regular
exercise should be part of everyone's lifestyle, and that
it is never too late to start exercising.