Smart Exercise 2Beat Alzheimer's & 2Stay Younger for Longer
Creaking knees, stiff back, dodgy shoulders… Advancing Age could be thought to be no friend to humanity. So how are some of the best and the brightest still at the top of their Age Game? And what can we do to Catch Up?
Slow
down, that used to be the mantra for middle age. The dread half-century
reached, fifty somethings were expected to take up less challenging
physical activities – if they were physical at all.
A gentle stroll
around the golf course, perhaps, rewarded with a gin and tonic at the
19th hole; or membership of the local bowling club, blazered crown green
rather than 10-pin.
Physical decline as the body aged was
inevitable, something to be grumbled about, accepted and dealt with.
That fundamental law has not changed, but the way we manage ageing has.
Getting older need not mean getting weaker, at least not until the end
is truly nigh.
“Do not go gentle into that good night,” advises Dylan Thomas.
“Old age should burn and rave at close of day;/ Rage, rage against the
dying of the light.”
Thomas raged over a pint pot, but the rage in this
case is high-intensity training, bursts of challenging – yes, painful –
exercise interspersed with periods of lesser exertion and rest. We
should all be doing this in our later years, except for those whose
health makes such exertion dangerous.
It is not ageing that causes a decline in
fitness; rather, that a decline in fitness causes ageing.
This is the
simple thesis of Play On: How to Get Better with Age by the American journalist and sports fan Jeff Bercovici.
Bercovici, a sometime amateur soccer player,
seeks to dispel conventional wisdom about longevity: that life is
essentially a dispiriting linear process in which the human machine
gradually winds down, clogging here and rusting there before falling
into decrepitude.
Instead, he argues, we can not only extend our lives
by occasionally punishing our bodies but extend our “peak years” of
fitness into the autumn and winter of existence. Functionality, rather
than a long lifespan, is what matters.
To do this, he examines the lives of sportsmen
and women whose fitness regime has allowed them to keep performing at
the top level into their 30s.
Like Roger Federer, 36, the Swiss tennis player who many would say is the greatest exponent of his sport in history, and Serena Williams,
his female opposite number, also 36.
Beneficiaries of the latest
findings in sports science and medicine, these athletes lead the way on a
journey that we can all follow, at whatever level of performance.
The buzz technique that has gained favour is high-intensity interval training (HIIT)
in which bursts of intense activity – such as sprinting and cycling –
are interspersed with periods of lower-intensity exercise.
You know you
are at high intensity when muscles burn and you get out of breath. In
other words, it hurts.
“Ageing science supports that we should do high
intensity every week, getting your heart rate up to at least 80% of its
maximum,” says Bercovici.
“Even 10 or 20 minutes a week will produce
results – that means getting up to the point where it feels unpleasant.
It should be a feeling that you can’t keep this up much longer.
“High intensity activates different pathways in
your body, with benefits at the cellular level. Together with gentler
exercise, it improves overall fitness.
The trick is getting the balance:
say, 20% high to 80% low.”
Strength training is also important, building
muscle and helping to prevent later-life injuries. There is also a
neurological benefit from this type of exercise.
Instinct tells us that
playing bridge and doing the crossword are good for the brain, but
workouts also improve cognitive function, although the process is poorly
understood.
Sitting back with a cup of tea is not an option
if you want to stave off the relentless process that is getting old.
Many symptoms of ageing are linked to decreased hormone levels,
particularly testosterone. The less testosterone you have, the harder it
is to retain and build skeletal muscle (all the muscle that is not part
of your circulatory system or digestive tract).
Skeletal muscle burns a
lot of calories. As you lose skeletal muscle, your metabolism slows,
meaning any calories you consume are more likely to end up as fat. And
fat secretes the hormone oestrogen and proteins that promote chronic
inflammation and insulin resistance.
As the writer Bill Gifford puts it in Spring Chicken,
a 2015 tour of anti-ageing science,
“Ageing makes us fat, and then our
fat makes us age.” It gets worse.
BONES
After 45, osteoarthritis – painful
inflammation of the bones at the joints – becomes much more common. This
happens as the cartilage that acts as a shock absorber in those joints,
particularly in the knees, wears down and the cells that help it regrow
get worse at their job, again for reasons not totally understood.
The shocks that cushion the vertebrae of your
spine take a beating, too.
By the age of 50, more people than not have
at least one bulging intervertebral disk, even if they don’t experience
any symptoms. As you exit your 40s, your risk of a herniated disk
shrinks.
Great – except that it is because the disks themselves are
shrinking, which not only predisposes you to new types of pain but
explains why you will get a little shorter with each passing decade.
BRAIN
Your nervous system is changing, too.
Reaction
times are at their best around age 24 and become slower from then on.
This has to do with the reduced speed at which nerve signals travel. As
the protective casings of protein around peripheral nerves degrade, they
cannot conduct impulses as efficiently. This is one reason that the
simple act of balancing requires more conscious effort in the elderly.
But here’s the good news: most of these major
changes can be attenuated, delayed or reversed through frequent and
vigorous exercise.
Bercovici says it won’t keep your hair dark or stop
you needing glasses, but the most pernicious symptoms of ageing –
- Cognitive impairment,
- Muscle wasting,
- Bone thinning,
- Cardiovascular damage
– just don’t happen in the same way in people who work out often.
Take Tour de France cyclists: they enjoy an
eight-year boost to their lifespans over we couch potatoes. Athletes in
endurance sports or sports that demand a mix of endurance and power,
such as football or basketball, fare better than pure power athletes,
such as weight lifters.
Elite sports performers continue to succeed well
past the peak age for their sport, not because they train more but
because they train more efficiently.
Periodisation
They use periodisation –
interweaving intense training with rest – to avoid fatigue and injury.
This is something laymen can learn from.
Players in their 30s are now common in
first-class tennis, most notably Federer. With 20 grand slam titles to
his credit, he is the most fluent and elegant of players, with feet as
light as a dancer’s. But nowadays, he doesn’t overdo it. “Federer
doesn’t drive himself to the wall,” says Bercovici.
SMARTEST, not the Fastest, Biggest or Strongest !
“Older athletes like
him are no longer striving to be the biggest, strongest or fastest, but
the smartest, in using their training to maximum effect.
The biggest
feature of many modern sportsmen now is how much sleep they get. In
America, rest in the middle of a sports season was totally alien 20
years ago, but now it is accepted.”
So pummelling yourself to death for hours on end
in the gym need not be the answer. Relatively brief periods of
high-intensity interval training, which make allowances for busy work
and family lives, can help keep us young, or at least higher functioning
older people.
Even Federer is a spring chicken compared with
athletes performing well into their forties.
British runner Jo Pavey is a
home-grown example of increasing longevity in sport. The Devon-based
athlete will be just shy of her 45th birthday in August, yet age has not
dulled her love of competition.
Veteran of five Olympic Games, with two
children to care for, she is nevertheless preparing for the 10,000m in
that month’s European Athletics Championships in Berlin.
In 2014, she
won gold in the same event, when she was about to turn 41, becoming the
oldest European champion in history.
Pavey knows how to pace herself on
and off the track, missing this year’s Commonwealth Games in Australia
to ensure freshness in the summer. If anyone beats the linear model for
ageing, it is her.
“There’s always a next thing to aim for, and
something to look forward to,” she says. “The thing is that you get some
years when you feel older but when things are going wrong you can be 26
and feel old! You get years when you feel old and others when you feel
young again.”
Other female athletes have maintained elite
performance into their 40s, such as 42-year-old Uzbek gymnast Oksana
Chusovitina, who hopes to compete in her eighth Olympics in 2020.
And
American road cyclist Kristin Armstrong, 44, who came home with a gold
from the time trial in the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, her third in
that event.
The Option of Medical Science
And when age takes its toll, there is always the
option of medical science.
For example, we are only a decade away from
being able to 3D-print replacement cartilage – something Andy Murray
could do with. Cartilage is particularly affected by age – about a
quarter of all adults over 55 show signs of knee osteoarthritis, the
inflammation that occurs when cartilage breaks down.
Nirav Pandya, an orthopaedic surgeon at the
University of California at San Francisco, says:
“In the young kid you
have such good healing potential. But take that person who may have had a
couple of injuries in their knee when they played college sports, and
now they’re 35 or 40 and it’s just bothering them. The answer before
was, ‘Just stop.’
Now, it may be, ‘Let’s grow some cartilage in this
area. Let’s see if we can get your body back to when you were 20 through
some of the cell and molecular stuff we are doing.’”
Longevity & the Billionaires
In Silicon Valley, where longevity is an
obsession, the technological solution is appealing. Tech billionaires
are using their wealth to put some distance between themselves and the
Grim Reaper.
Sergey Brin and Larry Page, the cofounders of Google, have
launched a company called Calico
(California Life Company) with the mission to “harness advanced
technologies to increase our understanding of the biology that controls
lifespan”.
But death always enjoys the upper hand. Research
suggests 120 is the absolute upper limit for the durability of the
human frame, so far. Cell mutation over time is
what does us in. Judith Campisi, a professor of biogerontology at the
Buck Institute in the US, explains that the more biologically complex an
organism, the harder it is to extend its life.
We can keep roundworms
alive for 10 times their normal lifespan. But humans? Not yet.
Most of us need not worry about life at 120, or
even 90. Our sedentary lifestyle helps ensure that many of us will
depart this earth well before.
Public Health England
(PHE) says some six million people between 40 and 60 in England are
endangering their health by not taking so much as a brisk walk for 10
minutes once a month.
Death Reduction by 15% for Couch Potatoes
But there is always the chance to change. One of
the benefits of being a couch potato in youth and early middle-age is
the lack of stress damage accrued by serious athletes that can leave
some of them old before their time.
“By walking just 10 continuous minutes at a
brisk pace every day, an individual can reduce their risk of early death
by 15%,” says Professor Muir Gray, adviser to PHE.
“They can also
prevent or delay the onset of disability and further reduce their risk
of serious health conditions, such as diabetes, heart disease, dementia
and some cancers.”
Emma Stevenson, professor of sport and exercise at
Newcastle University’s Institute for Ageing,
says it is all about functionality – living well, not just longer.
“Age
is not a reason not to be doing things,” she says.
“That way, we age
more quickly. We may be living longer but without good nutrition and
exercise we lose functionality – like simply being able to get out of a
chair – and that is not good quality of life.”
How to get fit for life
1. Ramp up exercise gradually, preparing your
body for the demands you wish to place on it. Walking is a great way to
start. Just 10 continuous minutes at a brisk pace every day can reduce
the risk of early death by 15%.
2. Aim for 10 or 20 minutes a week of
high-intensity exercise – getting your heart rate up to at least 80% of
its maximum. This means getting to the point where it feels unpleasant
(sweating, raised heart rate, out of breath) and that you can’t keep it
up for long.
3. High-intensity interval exercise should be
followed by unloading activities, such as stretching and massage.
Time-pressured people are tempted to extend exercise during a visit to
the gym and skip stretching. Bad idea.
4. Keep to a 20:80 ratio for high:low intensity
exercise. Also aim for some strength training (push-ups, squats,
resistance bands) to build muscle and help to prevent later-life
injuries, like those to the hip.
5. Avoid fads and eat a generally healthy diet,
with plenty of vegetables and whole grains. Protein builds muscle and
creatine powder in a glass of milk helps build and maintain muscle. Bone
broth is good.
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