Yes, You Can Exercise at ANY Age
There's an overwhelming amount of evidence confirming that
physical exercise is a key player in disease
reduction, optimal mental, emotional and physical health, and longevity. After
reviewing 40 papers published between 2006 and 2010, researchers found that exercise
reduces the risk of about two dozen health conditions, ranging from cancer and
heart disease to type 2 diabetes, stroke, dementia and depression. Exercise
also slows down the rate of aging itself, providing perhaps the closest example
of a real life fountain of youth as we will ever find.
Ideally, you will have made exercise a regular part of your life
long before you reach your "golden" years … but if you haven't,
there's no better time to start than the present. Research has shown that
regular exercise, even initiated late in life, offers profound health benefits.
For instance:
·
Even
a small amount of exercise may protect the elderly from long-term memory loss
and even help reverse some of the
effects of aging.
·
Women
between the ages of 75 and 85, all of whom had reduced bone mass or full-blown
osteoporosis, were able to lower
their fall risk with strength training and
agility activities.
·
Moderate
exercise among those aged 55-75 may cut
the risk of developing metabolic syndrome, which increases heart disease and
diabetes risk.
·
Among
those who started exercising at age 50 and continued for 10 years, the rate of premature death declined
dramatically, similar to giving up smoking and mirroring the level as seen
among people who had been working out their entire lives.
·
Exercise
significantly improved muscle
endurance and physical capacity among
heart failure patients with an average age of 76.
Further, the older you get, the faster your muscles atrophy if
you're not regularly engaging in appropriate exercise, so the key to avoiding
sarcopenia (age-related muscle loss) is to challenge your muscles with
appropriately intense exercise. Age-related muscle loss affects about 10
percent of those over 60, with higher rates as age advances, but you can prevent this from occurring if you exercise.
For the Elderly Exercise Can, Quite Literally,
Save Your Life
Exercise is a key to
remaining steady on your feet as you get older, which is of incredible
importance because not only are falls responsible for most fractures and
traumatic brain injuries among the elderly, but those who fall can also develop
an intense fear of falling again, which leads them to limit their activities and
in turn increases their risk of falling even more.
So while it may seem like exercises to improve balance and
strength are optional as you get older, they should really be viewed as a
necessity -- like eating and sleeping -- as they can quite literally save your
life. As you get older your muscle and bone mass decrease and the senses that
guide your balance -- vision, touch, proprioception -- may all start to
deteriorate, and this can make you unsteady on your feet.
By taking the time to do balance, strength and other exercises on
a regular basis you can keep your sense of balance strong, and even restore
what's already been lost.
In a study published last year, eight
weeks of balance training reduced slips and
improved the likelihood of recovery from slips among the elderly. Separate
research, which noted that "altered balance is the greatest collaborator
towards falls in the elderly," found balance training is effective in improving functional and static
balance, mobility and falling frequency in elderly women with osteoporosis.
The ability to
balance on one leg is also an
important predictor of injury-causing falls, so if you know that you'd be shaky
if you tried to stand on one foot, you're at an increased risk of being hurt in
a fall and should start appropriate exercises immediately.
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