Skip to main content

Strength training builds more than muscle


Most of us know that strength training (with free weights, weight machines, or resistance bands) can help build and maintain muscle mass and strength. What many of us don't know is that strong muscles lead to strong bones. And strong bones can help minimize the risk of fracture due to osteoporosis. A combination of age-related changes, inactivity, and inadequate nutrition conspire to gradually steal bone mass, at the rate of 1% per year after age 40. As bones grow more fragile and susceptible to fracture, they are more likely to break after even a minor fall or a far less obvious stress, such as bending over to tie a shoelace. You could be living life right now with a microscopic fracture and think it is just pain from old age.

Osteoporosis should be a concern for all of us. An estimated eight million women and two million men in the United States have osteoporosis. It is now responsible for more than two million fractures each year, and experts expect that number will rise. Hip fractures are usually the most serious. Six out of 10 people who break a hip never fully regain their former level of independence. Even walking across a room without help may become impossible.

Numerous studies have shown that strength training can play a role in slowing bone loss, and several show it can even build bone. This is tremendously useful to help offset age-related declines in bone mass. Activities that put stress on bones can nudge bone-forming cells into action. That stress comes from the tugging and pushing on bone that occur during strength training (as well as weight-bearing aerobic exercises like walking or running). The result is stronger, denser bones.

And strength training, in particular, has bone benefits beyond those offered by aerobic weight-bearing exercise. It targets bones of the hips, spine, and wrists, which are the sites most likely to fracture. What's more, resistance workouts — particularly those that include moves emphasizing power and balance — enhance strength and stability. That can boost confidence, encourage you to stay active, and reduce fractures another way — by cutting down on falls.
Interpreted from the Harvard medical journal

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Strength Training and protein essential after 40 years old

By:Charlie Dannelly Personal Trainer People who would like to become physically stronger should start with weight training and add protein to their diets, according to a comprehensive scientific review of research. The review finds that eating more protein, well past the amounts currently recommended, can significantly augment the effects of lifting weights, especially for people past the age of 40. But there is an upper limit to the benefits of protein, the review cautions. On the other hand, any form of protein is likely to be effective, it concludes, not merely high-protein shakes and supplements. Beef, chicken, yogurt and even protein from peas or quinoa could help us to build larger and stronger muscles. It makes intuitive sense that protein in our diets should aid in bulking up muscles in our bodies, since muscles consist mostly of protein. When we lift weights, we stress the muscles and cause minute damage to muscle tissue, which then makes new proteins to heal. But muscles

Fitness over 50: A new age a new workout

By: Charlie Dannelly Personal Trainer You’ve been working out the same way for years and you like your workout. But is it good for your body now? Let’s look at some things you might need to do to safeguard against injury. Your body has aged, So what’s different? • We lose muscle and strength as we age. • Loss of flexibility is prominent. • Staying hydrated is harder. • Our neurological system is more sensitive. • Cartilage wear and joint pain comes into play. • And our balance may be compromised as we develop hearing loss. • High blood pressure and cardiovascular disease can make exercise down right dangerous if you haven’t talked to your doctor first. Getting back into a workout routine alone is risky because you could do too much in the beginning. You should have an experienced trainer guide you and keep their trained eye on your condition. The following are some of the things doctors see when people start back training. • Rotator cuff tears • Bone spurs •

Sexually healing

Changing workouts, being more open with your partner, and altering your routine sex life could reignite your passion and thus heal your body and your relationship. By: Charlie Dannelly Personal Trainer It's never to late for fitness and it's never to late for SEX . Mentally your sex-drive can stay active late in life, but physically your body just doesn't have enough energy which can lead to frustration and depression, causing a rift in your relationship. Low levels of sexual performance can affect other areas of your life. When your brain wants sex and your body doesn't your negative feelings can start to grow. Depression, apathy, low self-esteem, irritability, along with the growing desire to become reclusive can start to take over your life. But just as losing weight gives you more energy there are also ways to turn you back into a sexual tyrannosaurus. Find your energy sappers Energy sappers are either physical or mental. Here are the most common. H