Even elderly adults should
exercise.
by Splete, Heidi
Washington -- As long as they're healthy, adults of any age
should be encouraged to exercise, because studies show that it's a
safe way to improve their cardiovascular health.
"It turns out that healthy older adults are able to make the
necessary cardiovascular adjustments--and physiological homeostasis is
preserved--and they are able to exercise effectively," said Douglas
Seals, Ph.D., a physiologist who studies aging and exercise at the
University of Colorado, Boulder. He spoke at the annual meeting of the
Society of Geriatric Cardiology.
The aging process decreases the maximum exercise capacity in
healthy adults by approximately 10% per decade of life, but it's
important to remember at any age, individuals can exercise to achieve a
higher aerobic capacity than their less-active peers, Dr. Seals said.
"Aging will limit the absolute intensity and duration of
submaxi-mal aerobic exercise that can be performed by older adults.
There's no way around that. However, performance of sustained
submaxi-mal exercise is not impaired by advancing age," Dr. Seals
said.
"Your patients are performing submaximal exercise when you ask
them to exercise, not maximal exercise, so the ability to perform
submaximal exercise is important," he continued.
To illustrate how healthy older adults respond to exercise, Dr.
Seals cited a study that compared measurements during and after
submaximal physical exertion in sedentary and trained groups of both
healthy young men (aged 20-32 years) and healdiy older men (aged 60-70
years).
The volunteers walked on a treadmill for 60 minutes with enough
effort to reach 70% of their maximum oxygen uptake, or V[0.sub.2] max.
Both groups of older men had smaller increases in heart rate and
lower rates of perceived exertion than did the younger men.
Plasma lactate responses, which can be used to indicate metabolic
stress in muscles, were also smaller in the older men.
Plasma catecholamine responses, which can show a physiological
stress response to exercise, barely increased in any of the men (J.
Appl. Physiol. 1988; 65:900-8).
"One could reasonably interpret these data to mean that older
adults undergo a smaller increase in physiological stress from the
resting state, compared with young adults in submaximal exercise
conditions," Dr. Seals remarked.
He and his colleagues reinforced these findings in a similar study
of young and elderly men during a 45-minute treadmill walk (Clin.
Physiol. 1995;15:169-81).
The older men had lesser increases in heart rate, internal body
temperature, and plasma norepinephrine concentrations than did the
younger group.
"What we concluded was that older adults demonstrate
equivaent, or even reduced, cardiovascular and thermal adjustments,
compared with young adults during submaximal exercise. That's good
news," Dr. Seals said.
The take-home message for clinicians is that older adults make the
necessary cardiovascular adjustments to handle submaximal exercise, he
said.
In fact, prolonged exercise at the same relative workload may
represent less of a challenge to older adults than to younger ones.
BY HEIDI SPLETE
Senior writer
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