If you want to delay the consequence of aging, you’d better
start running on daily basis according to a new study published in the August
11 issue of the journal Archives of Internal Medicine.
It has long been known that physical exercise improves our
life, helping us maintaining a healthy heart and body. Previous research has also
shown that exercise improves thinking and memory in people with normal brain
activity. How is that possible? Well, the researchers believe that exercise
increases blood flow to the brain, delivering oxygen and nutrients to brain
cells, and elevates growth hormones. That’s exactly the reason for which
exercising is recommended even in the case of people with Alzheimer’s.
According to a study published last month in the journal
Neurology, exercising on regular basis may help slow brain shrinkage in people
with early Alzheimer’s. The disease is also a consequence of aging and results
in mental and physical disability.
The current study made by the Stanford University School of
Medicine suggests that people over 50 who ran regularly over several years
suffered fewer disabilities, had a longer span of active life and lowered their
risk of dying early by 50 percent compared to those who were, as often they are
called, couch-potatoes.
For the study, lead author Professor James Fries and
colleagues surveyed 284 members of a nationwide running club and 156 similar,
healthy people as controls. The participants had similar social and economic
backgrounds and all were 50 or older. Each year, starting in 1984, they had to
fill out an annual questionnaire on exercise frequency, weight, and disability
for eight activities including rising, dressing and grooming, hygiene, eating,
walking, reach, handgrip and routine physical activities.
Most of the participants did some exercise, but runners
exercised as much as 200 minutes a week, compared to 20 minutes for the
non-runners. After 19 years of study, just 15 percent of the runners had died,
compared with 34 percent of the non-runners.
Both runners and non-runners became more disabled with age,
but for the runners the onset of disability started later.
“Running delayed the onset of disability by an average of 16
years, and that is largely a conservative number, because the control group was
pretty darn healthy,” Prof. Fries said.
Running was also linked to fewer heart and artery related
deaths, fewer deaths from cancer, neurological disease, infections, and other
causes.
“We did not expect this. The health benefits of exercise are
greater than we thought,” Prof. Fries said.
The running activity decreased by the age of 70. However,
“ex-runners” didn’t stop exercising. The majority continued doing some
“vigorous exercising.”
“Our findings of decreased disability in addition to prolonged survival among middle-aged and older adults participating in routine physical activities further support recommendations to encourage moderate to vigorous physical activity at all ages,” Dr Eliza Chakravarty, who was also involved in the study, said.