Healthy Eating

Exercise and Aging: Can you Walk Away From Father Time?


Exercise and Aging

Harvard Men's Health Watch is an eight-page monthly publication addressing men's health concerns to help them lead healthier, longer lives. Covering everything from prostate disease and nutrition and exercise, to sexual dysfunction and hair loss, Harvard Men's Health Watch delivers on its motto that "Knowledge is Power."



Excerpt from Men's Health Watch Newsletter

The clock ticks for all men, and with each tick comes change. For men who manage to avoid major medical problems, the changes are slow and gradual, but they do add up. Here are some things that aging can do to you — if you give up and let Father Time take his toll.

Some of the changes of aging start as early as the third decade of life. After age 25–30, for example, the average man’s maximum attainable heart rate declines by about one beat per minute, per year, and his heart’s peak capacity to pump blood drifts down by 5 to 10 percent per decade. That’s why a healthy 25-year-old heart can pump 2½ quarts of blood a minute, but a 65-year-old heart can’t get above 1½ quarts, and an 80-year-old heart can pump only about a quart, even if it’s disease-free. In everyday terms, this diminished aerobic capacity can produce fatigue and breathlessness with modest daily activities.

Starting in middle age, a man’s blood vessels begin to stiffen and his blood pressure often creeps up as well. His blood itself changes, becoming more viscous (thicker and stickier) and harder to pump through the body, even though the number of oxygen-carrying red blood cells declines.

Most Americans begin to gain weight in midlife, putting on three to four pounds a year. But since men start to lose muscle in their 40s, that extra weight is all fat. This extra fat contributes to a rise in LDL (“bad”) cholesterol and a fall in HDL (“good") cholesterol. It also helps explain why blood sugar levels rise by about 6 points per decade, making type 2 diabetes distressingly common in senior citizens.

The loss of muscle continues, eventually reducing a man’s musculature by up to 50 percent, which contributes to weakness and disability. At the same time, muscles nd ligaments get stiff and tight. Although men have a lower risk of osteoporosis (“thin bones”) than women, they do lose bone calcium as they age, increasing the risk of fractures.
 

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