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A Good Old Age: Will You Have
One?
Exercise May be the Key
by Dr. Robert E. Roush
I’ve
never met any one who wouldn’t want to have a good old
age, and since the title implies that attaining this goal
is a possibility, just maybe you can. Read on.
Population experts are uncertain whether there will be 35
or 36 million people 65+ years of age in the year 2000. What
is certain is that there will be more older people than at
any time in human existence. The 77 million baby boomers are
turning 50 at the rate of 10,000 more per day every day for
the next 10 years. And the first of those boomers start turning
65 in May 2011. By the year 2020, one in every five Americans
will be over 65. These statistics may have something to do
with your having a good old age since we may not have enough
health professionals specially trained in geriatrics –
we’re not even close to having that now – and
our Medicare and Social Security programs may not be adequately
funded to provide health and economic benefits to all those
older people, of whom I will be one. Well, there’s not
much we can do about those external factors except write our
congressional representatives and use the ballot box wisely.
So what’s all this got to do with exercise? Well, short
of being able to pick your ancestors who lived past 85 and
watching out for the proverbial Mack truck, exercise is probably
your best bet to enjoy however many years you’re going
to have. (On the practical side, it won’t hurt to have
saved and invested enough money to ensure that you can purchase
whatever services you may need to live well.)
When older people say "Dr. Roush, is it too late for
me to start exercising?" My reply is this: "It’s
never too late to start an exercise program; the key is how
to start." Indeed the very nature of the individual’s
question is indicative that they are somewhat motivated to
start. They just need some help. Doing it without instruction
and by themselves, can be dangerous and is a lonely prospect
that will probably not be continued very long. In fact, we
now have a wonderful video on the subject; it's entitled "It's
Never Too Late: The Surprising Benefits of Exercise as We
Age" which will soon be available on research channel.com.
We'll let you know the date of the premier.
My first suggestion is for you to see a health care provider
to make sure you don’t have some underlying condition
that would be aggravated by exercising. Then find an individual
or group that is knowledgeable about the proper way to begin
and to maintain an exercise regimen. Almost every library
has information on the subject, as do YMCAs, health clubs,
senior centers, and medical school departments of family,
internal, and physical medicine. More recently, almost every
managed care organization or HMO has a wellness program, including
exercise. Also, there are tons of information on the Internet.
If readers have access to the World Wide Web, they could log
on the Huffington Center on Aging’s Website at http://www.hcoa.org
and go to our Links section and surf the ‘Net using
many of our links and the several search engines.
So why do you want to exercise? Don’t you want to have
stronger muscles and increased bone density so you can climb
stairs, enjoy outdoor pleasures, work, and avoid falls and
fractures? Don’t you want to have improvements in your
immune system to help ward off certain infections, or at least
minimize the length and severity of them? Don’t you
want to lower your cholesterol level and blood pressure to
reduce your risk of a heart attack or stroke? Don’t
you want to be able to effectively treat depression without
drugs? Don’t you want to minimize some of the stiffness
and pain of arthritis? Don’t you want to perhaps lose
some weight and look and feel better? Don’t you want
to sleep better, and yes, some say even have better sex? And
don’t you want to experience that wonderful feeling
of accomplishment and control over your health? Well, research
findings suggest that if you start exercising and do it throughout
your life, or as long as you can, then many of these "good
outcomes" can happen. In fact, studies published in major
medical journals and the experience of wellness centers like
Dr. Cooper’s in Dallas, Texas, all show that moderate,
sustained exercise will produce many of these benefits. More
vigorous aerobic exercise, that which burns 2000 K/cal per
week, can indeed protect against heart disease.
In fairness, I should also say this: exercise alone will
not do the trick of producing the healthy changes, including
weight loss, that most people start exercising for in the
first place. A diet low in fat and total calories proportionate
to your weight must accompany your exercise program, because
you only burn off about 100 calories per mile if you’re
running at a 10-minute/mile pace or walking briskly at about
15 minutes per mile. One rule is that you should not consume
more than 15 calories/pound of your desired weight, e.g.,
if you want to weigh 150 lb., then 15 X 150 = 2250 calories
a day. Since one pound of body fat = about 3600 unburned calories,
you can figure how much you need to burn off over what you
take in and how long it will take for you to have a net reduction
of 3600 calories, inclusive of those burned off during exercise.
And one should consume fewer than 60 grams of fat since fat
grams have 9 calories, vs. protein and carbohydrates each
with 4 calories, e.g., 60 x 9 = 540 divided by 2250 total
calories = 24% of calories from fat. And you should try to
do better than that. Now, you should also be aware of the
P/S ratio, i.e., polyunsaturated (like olive oil and other
vegetable oils) vs. saturated fat from animal sources (red
meat and organ meat vs. chicken and fish). You want a P/S
ratio of better than 2/1 (2 or more grams of a polyunsaturated
fat for every gram of a saturated fat). Remember, for every
gram of fat you replace with a gram of protein or carbohydrate,
you save 5 calories. Fortunately, almost all food labels provide
this information, and one can even ask restaurants if they
can tell you these values when you choose from the menu. Then
there are great sources of information like the Help Your
Heart Eating Diet written by my Baylor colleagues –
Drs. Michael E. DeBakey, Tony Gotto, John Foryet, and Ms.
Lynne Scott – where one can learn these important values
as well as delicious recipes to prepare your favorite foods
healthfully. On another note, exercisers usually engage in
other healthy practices like not using tobacco products and
not consuming more than 2 oz. of alcohol per day.
Going back to getting started, the rule is start low and
go slow. Exercise is a very broad term, and one should not
think that they must run or play a vigorous sport like racquetball,
although those are great forms of exercise. After seeking
professional advice -- and this piece should not be construed
to be medical advice --one should begin something simple like
walking. But before you do that, take 5 minutes to warm-up
by stretching and going through the full range of motion of
your joints by slowly swinging your arms in a wide circle
to rotate the shoulder joints. Then, with arms outstretched,
twist your upper body to the right, then to the left several
times. You might want to lie down and with legs uplifted,
bend the knees several times, and then swing the legs out
and in, and then in a scissor-kick movement. Everything is
slow and smooth. Do not overdo this warm-up. Then, the most
important step is to stretch the Achilles by leaning against
the wall with palms touching the wall and feet flat on the
floor and hold that position for 30 seconds or so while you
feel the calf muscles below the knee stretch all the way to
your heels.
Most exercise prescriptions, and you should think of them
as just that – like a doctor or nurse writing an Rx
on a pad – stipulate that you do whatever you plan to
do 3-5 times per week for at least 30 minutes each time whether
you’re walking, running, riding a bicycle, using a rowing
machine, swimming, etc. Then, just as important as the warm
up is the cool down and another stretch and range of motion
activity. Before we leave the exercise prescription, some
recent research findings also suggest that resistance training
like weight lifting – preferably with a calibrated machine
vs. free weights unless you have a spotter – confers
not only increased muscle mass, but bone remineralization
as well. These benefits, along with those from such other
alternative exercises like the Chinese martial art,Tai Chi,
have been shown to prevent falls in frail, older nursing home
residents. If it’s good for them, wouldn’t they
be good for us?
Again, the key is to choose something you like, and start
with modest goals, e.g., if you’re going to walk, then
measure a mile using the odometer on your car in your neighborhood
or on a marked trail in a park. Starting from scratch, I’d
try to do it in 20 minutes, if you can. Your objective is
to slowly increase the distance by about 10-15% per week and
pick up the pace so that in about a month you can walk 2 miles
in about 35 minutes. Then, you want to extend your walk to
3 miles in 45 minutes. Before you start, use a good watch
and count your pulse rate either, at the wrist or at the carotid
artery in the neck, for 10 seconds and multiply by 6. Keep
a record of this because your resting pulse rate and your
maximum rate are important values. To compute your maximum
pulse rate, subtract your age from 220 and multiply by 75%.
I’m 58, so 220-58 = 162 x .75 = 122, which is my maximum,
age-adjusted heart rate. This is my target: I want to walk
or run briskly enough to attain my maximum heart rate. At
this level of exercise, your heart and lungs are experiencing
aerobic effects, and since they are just muscles like your
biceps, they get stronger when they are exercised. This may
take you several weeks, even months. If you can’t achieve
the level of aerobic exercise, don’t quit. Anything
is better than nothing. One tip is to do this with someone
or a group. Set individual goals, but share them with the
group and help reinforce each person’s hard work and
share in their joy of attaining their goals.
One popular way of maintaining motivation to continue is
to work with a personal trainer. Everyone could benefit from
a good coach. If several people went in to share the cost,
it would probably be worth it, at least to get started and
to work through those first hard times and when you just want
to stay home. Now, regarding keeping track of your pulse rate,
you will be surprised at how much your resting pulse rate
will drop after you’ve become conditioned to working
at the highest level. With normal pulse rates in the 72-90
range, well conditioned marathoners have rates in the 40s.
Yes, their hearts only beat 40 times per minute to pump the
same amount of oxygenated blood through their bodies as your
heart does at almost twice that. When you become fit, you
will probably have rates in the 60s. Your blood pressure will
also probably go down, so have that checked before you start
and keep tabs on it as you progress. These two physiological
markers will tell you you’re fit, especially the quicker
that your heart rate returns to baseline after maximum effort.
But you will know it anyway, because you are just going to
feel better and have more get up and go. There’s just
nothing like that good "tired" feeling following
a brisk workout.
I would also start and end each exercise activity with a
little "mind over body" session of sitting in a
chair with your head down and arms in your lap and legs outstretched
comfortably with eyes closed and, while breathing deeply and
exhaling slowly 5 or 6 times, envision yourself having a great
workout and feeling good about having done so because you
deserve it.
That’s the good news. Now for the bad. If you don’t
warm up and cool down and stretch and don’t drink a
lot of clear water before, during, and after, and if you go
out in too hot or too cold temperatures without taking reasonable
precautions, you’re going to sustain an injury to a
joint or a muscle. If you don’t wear the correct type
of shoe and other gear, then you may sustain a stress fracture.
If you don’t rest properly between exercise sessions
or if you over do it, then you will experience the overuse
syndrome of stress, burnout, and feelings of tiredness and
lack of motivation.
If any of these things happen, do you quit? Certainly not:
just go back to your health provider, preferably one who has
a gym bag in his or her own office (that they actually use
themselves!) and get on a rehab program and a modified exercise
regimen until you can resume what you were doing before the
injury. If you can’t get in to see a doctor, physical
therapist or other qualified professional, then the rule of
thumb is to "ice it and stay off it" until you can.
Also, if your doctor says it’s ok, then taking an over-the-counter
anti-inflammatory drug containing ibuprofen in the correct
dosages can lessen the damage caused and shorten the recovery
time.
The other bit of bad news is this: exercise is something
that you just have to keep at. It doesn’t take but a
few days of bedrest for one to become deconditioned. Well,
so much for that, because the benefits clearly outweigh the
risks.
After reading all of this, I can hear you asking, "But
Dr. Roush, isn’t doing what you say easier said than
done?" Yes, it is. I’ve been through the highs
– four marathons – and lows of long periods of
inactivity and higher blood pressure and feeling sluggish.
Do I practice what I preach? I try. In fact, I’m on
my way out the door for my 3-mile, 15-minute/mile walk with
my headset tuned to KUHF 88.7 for "Saturday Afternoon
at the Met" for a little culture and a little exercise.
And I hope I’ll have the willpower at dinner tonight
to order broiled shrimp with rice pilaf rather than fried
shrimp with french fries, which I dearly love.
So what are you going to do? I hope
you go get some good sound medical advice and information,
start your exercise program, and stay with it through thick
and thin, no pun intended. Happy trails to you, and let me
know how you’re doing. "On your mark, get set,
go!"
"A Good Old Age: Will You Have
One? -- Exercise May be the Key"
by Dr. Robert E. Roush
Associate Professor of Geriatrics
Huffington Center on Aging, Baylor College of Medicine (10/10/00)
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