Can-Fit-Pro Magazine

JUILLET/AOÛT 2005


The Aging Body

By Colin Milner

Chronic diseases and disabilities were once thought inseparable from old age. This view is changing rapidly as one disease after another joins the ranks of those that can be prevented, or at least controlled, through changes in lifestyle.

We now know, for example, that most people can avoid lung disease by not smoking. As well, heart disease and stroke rates have fallen at the same time that Americans have lowered their fat consumption, begun to exercise more and quit smoking.

So, if chronic disease is not intrinsic to the aging process, as many gerontologists now believe, then what is? Are there universal or normal aging processes?

What is normal aging?
Today, gerontologists are discovering that age in years doesn’t necessarily correlate with physiological age. In fact, normal physiological aging is quite variable, according to investigators involved in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (a long-term National Institute on Aging (NIA) study begun in 1958 that has tracked the lives of more than 1,000 people from age 20 to 90 and beyond).

Not only do individuals age overall at vastly different rates, it is quite likely that age-related changes in various cells, tissues and organs differ as well. For instance, kidney function may decline more rapidly in some individuals. In others, bone strength may diminish faster. The organs that age fastest in one person may not age as rapidly in another. This suggests that genes, lifestyle and disease can all affect the rate of aging, and that several distinct processes are involved.

Even within one person, organs and organ systems show different rates of decline. However, some generalities can be made, based on data from the NIA study. In the article we look at three of these areas: the heart, body fat and muscle.

Heart
Heart muscle thickens with age. Maximal oxygen consumption during exercise declines in men by about 10 percent with each decade of adult life and in women by about 7.5 percent. This decline occurs because the heart’s maximum pumping rate and the body’s ability to extract oxygen from blood both diminish with age.

Cardiovascular capacity predicts longevity better than risk factors such as obesity, heart disease and smoking, according to a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2002. A research team led by Dr. Jonathan Myers, of Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health System in California, concludes that: “peak exercise capacity measured in metabolic equivalents (MET) [is] the strongest predictor of the risk of death among both normal subjects and those with cardiovascular disease” after adjusting for age. Furthermore, a landmark Texan study shows aerobic exercise can improve cardiovascular fitness dramatically, even after three decades of inactivity. Published in Circulation in 2001, the research outlines how six months of endurance training led to a 100 percent reversal of age-related declines in aerobic power in midlife men.

Body fat
Typically, body fat gradually increases in adulthood until individuals reach middle age. Then, it usually stabilizes until late life, when body weight tends to decline. As weight falls, older individuals tend to lose both muscle and body fat. With age, fat is redistributed in the body, shifting from just beneath the skin to deeper organs.
Women typically have a higher percentage of body fat than men. However, because of differences in how this fat is distributed – on the hips and thighs in women and on the abdomen in men – women may be less susceptible to certain conditions, including heart disease.
In fact, obesity levels among individuals ages 50 or older have more than doubled in the last two decades, according to AARP, a non-profit membership organization that serves older adults.

“Morbidity from obesity may be as great as from poverty, smoking or problem drinking,” states a June 2002 report by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). “Overweight and obesity are associated with an increased risk for developing various medical conditions including cardiovascular disease, certain cancers (endometrial, colon, postmenopausal breast, kidney and esophageal), high blood pressure, arthritis-related disabilities and type 2 diabetes,” continues the report, Physical Activity Fundamental to Preventing Disease. Regular physical activity and a nutritious diet are essential to help older adults maintain a healthy weight and reduce their health risks.

Muscles
Without exercise, estimated muscle mass declines 22 percent for women and 23percent for men between the ages of 30 and 70. To this loss, add strength declines of 50 percent and power reductions of 75 percent, and it’s easy to understand how many older people lose their functional independence. Exercise can slow the rate of loss of muscle mass, strength and power.

The seminal paper on strength training and aging was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 1990. Maria Fiatarone, Bill Evans and other researchers from Tufts University in Boston studied frail adults, average age 90, who participated in eight weeks of high-resistance weight training. The nine individuals who completed the study averaged muscle strength gains of 174 percent and mid-thigh muscle size increases of nine percent. Mean tandem gait speed also improved by 48 percent. In 1994, Fiatarone, Evans and colleagues published a landmark study in the New England Journal of Medicine about the effects of strength training on frail older adults. Of the 100 nursing home residents aged 72 to 98 years-old who participated in the study, 94 completed the high-intensity strength training program. In just 10 weeks, these frail individuals saw increases in muscle strength of 113 percent and cross-sectional thigh muscle of 2.7 percent. The researchers also noted significant improvements in gait velocity and stairclimbing power.

Once older adults have increased their strength and muscle mass, they can maintain this improvement with relatively little effort. A study conducted by Scott Trappe and colleagues from Ball State University in Indiana shows that these gains can be preserved with one weekly training session involving three sets of 10 repetitions at 80 percent of one rep. max. Trappe et. al.’s research was published in 2002 in the Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences.

Not aging, but disuse
“Much of what we think about aging is not aging, but disuse,” says Dr. Walter Bortz of Stanford University Medical School. To explain disuse, the past president of the American Geriatrics Society uses the analogy of a leg in a cast. Although the leg shrivels, weakens and looks old, it doesn’t age. That “old looking, old-functioning leg” will become vital and active again with exercise, but it won’t become younger. According to Bortz, there are only two proven ways for humans to “look and feel younger” and reduce the risks of dying or age-associated diseases: engaging in regular exercise and eating a healthy diet.

Health and wellness professionals are essentially partners with older adults who want to maintain a youthful vitality. By learning more about the aging process, those who work with older clients can provide programming that helps these individuals enjoy a vibrant, independent and active lifestyle for as long as possible.

Colin Milner is the CEO of the International Council on Active Aging, the world’s largest senior fitness association.

 

 

 

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