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Drop
In Exercise Efficiency
With Age Can Be Eased
Older adults may have to work harder than
young people to perform the same physical activity, but
regular exercise may close that age gap, research findings
suggests.
In a study comparing sedentary adults in their 60s and
70s with those in their 20s and 30s, researchers found
that older men and women had to use much more oxygen to
walk at the same speed as their younger counterparts.
But that was before they went through a six-month exercise
program. After taking up walking or jogging, biking and
stretching, the senior study participants reversed their
loss of exercise "efficiency."
Exercise efficiency refers to how much energy the body
expends to perform a given activity. At the start of this
study, older men and women used 20 percent more oxygen
to walk at the same speed as a younger person, said Dr.
Wayne C. Levy of the University of Washington in Seattle,
the study's senior author.
But six months of regular exercise -- 90 minutes, three
days per week -- improved older participants' exercise
efficiency by 30 percent, versus only 2 percent among
their younger counterparts.
The findings are published in the current issue of the
Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
It's well known that as people age, there is a decline
in exercise capacity -- how much work a person can do
before becoming exhausted. But the new findings suggest
this is not just a product of the aging cardiovascular
system being less able to send oxygen to working muscles.
The older body also needs more oxygen to perform the same
work as a younger one -- that is, exercise efficiency
declines.
But this decline appears to arise largely from inactivity,
and may well be reversible.
The idea that exercise efficiency dips with age is a
"relatively new concept," Levy stated. And though younger
people in his study were still better at pumping blood
and oxygen to their muscles after exercise training, it
was only the older exercisers who showed significant gains
in exercise efficiency.
Their "disproportionately" greater improvement in this
area, Levy and his colleagues write, is "new and unexpected."
It's not clear yet how intensely people need to exercise
to hang on to their efficiency as they age, according
to Levy. But he said he suspects that any activity done
regularly, including walking, would have benefits.
SOURCE: Journal of the American College of Cardiology,
March 7, 2006.