Exercise & Aging
kevin 03 Jul 2003
"Despite the numerous benefits of exercise -- for example, improving cardiovascular and muscular fitness -- we know very little about how exercise affects the immune systems of older adults,"
exercise training increases the ratio of naïve T cells to memory T cells in the spleens of older mice. The finding is potentially significant, he said, because, on this measure, "we turn old mice into young mice." When people and animals age, he explained, the thymus, which produces naïve T lymphocytes, shrinks, thus producing fewer naïve cells
Scientists focusing on how exercise raises immunity
Ivanhoe 30 Apr 2008
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Matt 30 Apr 2008
So I'm starting to get older and it depresses me. I've heard exercise can slow the rate of biological aging to some extent. True?
No I don't believe exercise can slow the rate of aging. You need to do Calorie Restriction to do that.... there is always a chance resveratrol 'might' work though.
VictorBjoerk 05 May 2008
zoolander 05 May 2008
So I'm starting to get older and it depresses me. I've heard exercise can slow the rate of biological aging to some extent. True?
First of all, if the thought of getting older depresses you then you better get used to it. Not the depression but rather the getting older. At the moment, that's inevitable. Best thing do you is to change the way you think of getting older. Old does not mean pain and suffering.
Second, what do you mean by the "rate of biological aging"? Are you referring to intrinsic aging?
Re. exercise and slowing the rate of aging....well I don't think that we are referring to aging per se in this situation. We're referring to the accelerated aging that comes from the mis/disuse of the various organs and organs systems. Exercise keeps the body growing by forcing it to adapt to it's environment. These adaptations help us deal with the stress(es) that we face in life. For example, aerobic exercise stresses the body increases it's demand for oxygen. The oxygen is needed to fuel the aerobic exercise and without it the body struggles. So, because the body is a learning machine very much like a network computer, and learns to adapt to a stimulus so that can function in it's environment, aerobic exercise increases our cells ability to utilise oxygen. Not just for aerobic exercise but across the board. An increase in the cells ability to utilise oxygen (measure by VO2max) helps us deal with fight or flight stress situation. Another great example can be given with skeletal muscle. As we age there is a certain degree of muscltrength training increases the muscles cross sectional area but also wakes up the motor neuron that stimulates the muscle. Waking up the motor neuron increases the muscles response time and hence can help prevent falls in the elderly because the muscle ability to sense and correct change is increased. Preventing falls in the elderly prevents possible hip fractures. A hip fracture in advanced age is a devastating insult to the bodies physiology.
So, to answer your question, I think exercise will make you feel young again. Finding that youthful vigor is the important first step IMO. Exercise will also help you in the following ways;
1. increased muscle mass means increased basal metabolic rate. This will keep your weight in check. It will also minimise you chance of diabetes because muscle is the largest glucose store in the body.
2. Keep you agile so that you can quickly adapt to your environment and prevent injury and illness. This statement stands for both the skeletal muscle, cardiac muscle and cardiovascular system.
3. If your not exercising already, exercise will help you become more aware of your body. You will naturally become more aware of your health as well. You become more health conscious and less lazy. LESS LAZY!
No I don't believe exercise can slow the rate of aging. You need to do Calorie Restriction to do that.... there is always a chance resveratrol 'might' work though.
Matt you are a very strong proponent of CR but I do not think that CR is for everyone. In fact I read a few studies in 2007 (can't find them now) that demonstrated that whilst the research data in animals/primates is proposing, adherence to a calorie restricted diet for long periods of times in humans is not common.
Anyhow....matt what's the latest research re. humans and CR.
VictorBjoerk 05 May 2008
What do you mean by that?
VictorBjoerk 06 May 2008
Shepard 06 May 2008
There are a couple of good articles in this month's Iron Man about exercise for the aged. One is a big article on Frank Zane, who looks decent at 65. But, the real value is in Bill Starr's article. There are quite a few under the radar guys that still lift heavy up to their 70s. Paul Kelso posts on some other boards, and he says that he still loads up the bar once in a while.
VictorBjoerk 06 May 2008
forever freedom 06 May 2008
Shepard 06 May 2008
Isn't muscle strength one of the things that remains relative unaffected by the aging process?The flexibility and reaction time reduces a lot but an old man can often e.g benchpress surprisingly much.
Most Master's lifters are hindered by past injuries more than anything else. But, some (natural) competitors/lifters put up some of their best numbers at 45+. I'm not sure other types of strength hold up as well as maximum strength. But, LaLanne doesn't seem to have any trouble with muscular endurance (although, that is the type of training he's been doing for a long time).
zoolander 06 May 2008
adherence to a calorie restricted diet for long periods of times in humans is not common.
I mean that it's pretty hard to voluntarily stick to CR. I look for the study that mentioned this. It's a different story in controlled environments such as though seen in animal and primate model. They get feed a very controlled amount of food per day.
Isn't muscle strength one of the things that remains relative unaffected by the aging process?
It is affected by the aging process. What can be changed is the rate at which you lose muscle. Most aged individuals undergo an accelerated form of aged-related muscle loss. This is due mainly to disuse atrophy and other things such as diet, low-grade chronic inflammation and so on. So to answer the question.....muscle strength is affected by age. The losses in muscle strength cannot be explained by the loss in muscle size alone. Motor neuron changes have also been implicated with a change from the faster type II to the slower more oxidative type I transition seen with aging.
In short, if you lift weights all your life, as you age you will lose muscle size and strength. Especially from your 6th decade onwards. This is inevitable.
niner 06 May 2008
Welcome to the forum, Ivanhoe! If you are a typical sedentary person, exercise will provide some incredible gains. If exercise were a drug, it would outsell anything on the market. If you are not using any supplements or drugs, there's a lot that can be done in that area as well. If you are starting from a typical diet, then even without CR, improvements in diet can also do a lot for you. Reducing your glucose load can slow the rate of glycation, which is one aspect of aging. If you smoke, quitting or even switching to a different nicotine delivery system will slow the rate of oxidative damage. There's a lot you can do, so cheer up! The news is good and getting better.So I'm starting to get older and it depresses me. I've heard exercise can slow the rate of biological aging to some extent. True?
Mind 06 May 2008
Unregistered 06 May 2008
Zoolander:
"Second, what do you mean by the "rate of biological aging"? Are you referring to intrinsic aging?"
I think Ivanhoe means this.
http://www.imminst.o...ing-t20127.html
or the direct link...
http://www.washingto...8012802081.html
Edited by Roe Williams, 06 May 2008 - 08:15 AM.
inawe 13 May 2008
http://www.scienceda...80512120958.htm
about research involving skeletal muscle, stem cells, glucose, calory
restriction, Nampt, NAD+, AMPK, SIRT1, ... Yeah, all that. The first paragraph is:
ScienceDaily (May 12, 2008) — A new study finds that restricted
nutrient availability prevents muscle stem cells from growing into
mature muscle cells. The research, published by Cell Press in the May
issue of the journal Developmental Cell, provides exciting new
information about how developing muscle cells sense and respond to
nutrient levels. The study adds a new twist to ongoing research into
the effects of caloric restriction on physiology and aging and may
lead to new therapeutic avenues for muscle wasting.
There must be an implication as to the relation of CR and exercise, which
is not clear from that article. So I was looking for the published
paper but couldn't find it.
stephen_b 15 May 2008
StephenThus, failure of exercise to slow aging in previous studies is not likely the result of increased accrual of oxidative damage and may instead be due to an inability to fully mimic the hormonal and/or metabolic response to calorie restriction.
Edited by stephen_b, 15 May 2008 - 09:03 PM.
inawe 16 May 2008
Dev Cell. 2008 May;14(5):661-73.
Glucose restriction inhibits skeletal myoblast differentiation by activating SIRT1 through AMPK-mediated regulation of Nampt.Fulco M, Cen Y, Zhao P, Hoffman EP, McBurney MW, Sauve AA, Sartorelli V.
Laboratory of Muscle Stem Cells and Gene Regulation, National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, National Institutes of Health, 50 South Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
It is intuitive to speculate that nutrient availability may influence differentiation of mammalian cells. Nonetheless, a comprehensive complement of the molecular determinants involved in this process has not been elucidated yet. Here, we have investigated how nutrients (glucose) affect skeletal myogenesis. Glucose restriction (GR) impaired differentiation of skeletal myoblasts and was associated with activation of the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK). Activated AMPK was required to promote GR-induced transcription of the NAD+ biosynthetic enzyme Nampt. Indeed, GR augmented the Nampt activity, which consequently modified the intracellular [NAD+]:[NADH] ratio and nicotinamide levels, and mediated inhibition of skeletal myogenesis. Skeletal myoblasts derived from SIRT1+/- heterozygous mice were resistant to the effects of either GR or AMPK activation. These experiments reveal that AMPK, Nampt, and SIRT1 are the molecular components of a functional signaling pathway that allows skeletal muscle cells to sense and react to nutrient availability.
PMID: 18477450 [PubMed - in process]
A related work is:
Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2008 Apr;294(4):E668-78. Epub 2008 Jan 29. Links
Ambient glucose levels qualify the potency of insulin myogenic actions by regulating SIRT1 and FoxO3a in C2C12 myocytes.Nedachi T, Kadotani A, Ariga M, Katagiri H, Kanzaki M.
Division of Biomaterials, Tohoku University Biomedical Engineering Research Organization, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan.
Nutrition availability is one of the major environmental signals influencing cell fate, such as proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis, often functioning in concert with other humoral factors, including insulin. Herein, we show that low-serum-induced differentiation of C(2)C(12) myocytes is significantly hampered under low glucose (LG; 5 mM) compared with high glucose (HG; 22.5 mM) conditions, concurrently with nuclear accumulation of SIRT1, an NAD(+)-dependent deacetylase, and FoxO3a, both of which are implicated in the negative regulation of myogenesis. Intriguingly, insulin appears to exert opposite actions, depending on glucose availability, with regard to the regulation of SIRT1 and FoxO3a abundance, which apparently contributes to modulating the potency of insulin's myogenic action. Namely, insulin exerts a potent myogenic effect in the presence of sufficient glucose, whereas insulin is unable to exert its myogenic action under LG conditions, since insulin evokes massive upregulation of both SIRT1 and FoxO3a in the absence of sufficient ambient glucose. In addition, the hampered differentiation state under LG is significantly restored by sirtinol, a SIRT1 inhibitor, whereas insulin abolished this sirtinol-dependent restoration, indicating that insulin can function as a negative as well as a positive myogenic factor depending on glucose availability. Taken together, our data reveal the importance of ambient glucose levels in the regulation of myogenesis and also in the determination of insulin's myogenic potency, which is achieved, at least in part, through regulation of the cellular contents and localization of SIRT1 and FoxO3a in differentiating C(2)C(12) myocytes.
PMID: 18230695 [PubMed - in process]
They discuss how the availability of nutrients (like glucose), and NAD+
and SIRT1 affect skeletal muscle maintenance, increase or decrease.
VictorBjoerk 16 May 2008
TianZi 16 May 2008
Edited by TianZi, 16 May 2008 - 09:08 AM.
stephen_b 16 May 2008
I wonder though what is the optimal balance between CR and exercise for longevity. My guess: it's heavily tilted towards CR. 80%-20%?
Stephen
Edited by stephen_b, 16 May 2008 - 07:34 PM.
Shepard 18 May 2008
Most Master's lifters are hindered by past injuries more than anything else. But, some (natural) competitors/lifters put up some of their best numbers at 45+.
To further this thought, there was a small part in PLUSA last month about some aged lifters getting back together to compete again.
Dick Jenkins pulled 500lbs. as a 181lber in the 65-69 age group and 441lbs. in the 70-74 group later on. Rich Plummer, as a 300lber, pressed 290lbs. in the 60-64 group and 303lbs. in the 65-59 group. Hell, my grandmother pulled 242.5lbs. in the 65-69 age group as a 56kg lifter.
s123 18 May 2008
So I'm starting to get older and it depresses me. I've heard exercise can slow the rate of biological aging to some extent. True?
No I don't believe exercise can slow the rate of aging. You need to do Calorie Restriction to do that.... there is always a chance resveratrol 'might' work though.
CR is the ONLY way to slow down primary aging. Slowing down primary aging results in an increase in the maximal lifespan. Exercise can slow down secundary aging which results in an increase in the mean lifespan but NOT in the maximal lifespan.
VictorBjoerk 18 May 2008
CR is the ONLY way to slow down primary aging. Slowing down primary aging results in an increase in the maximal lifespan. Exercise can slow down secundary aging which results in an increase in the mean lifespan but NOT in the maximal lifespan.
What about resveratrol and other antioxidants?What about methionine restriction?
Edited by Michael, 23 March 2009 - 07:03 PM.
Guest_Kismet_* 19 May 2008
What about resveratrol and other antioxidants?What about methionine restriction?
CR is the ONLY way to slow down primary aging.
resveratrol has not been proven in humans and not everyone is that enthusiastic about res, e.g. http://mfoundation.o...isplay.php?f=48
Although I think some CR devotees underestimate the value of exercise. Even assuming it does 'only' increase mean lifespan, it still improves health and quality of life, thus improving your chances of achieving maximum life span (which may have been already increased by other means, who knows). A better quality of life in the long term equals more productivity and better chances of achieving your goals (e.g. immortality..)
Edited by Michael, 23 March 2009 - 07:04 PM.
VictorBjoerk 19 May 2008
resveratrol has not been proven in humans and not everyone is that enthusiastic about res, e.g. http://mfoundation.o...isplay.php?f=48
Although I think some CR devotees underestimate the value of exercise. Even assuming it does 'only' increase mean lifespan, it still improves health and quality of life, thus improving your chances of achieving maximum life span (which may have been already increased by other means, who knows). A better quality of life in the long term equals more productivity and better chances of achieving your goals (e.g. immortality..)
Cr hasn't been proven in humans regarding longevity either
Edited by Michael, 23 March 2009 - 07:05 PM.
s123 20 May 2008
So I'm starting to get older and it depresses me. I've heard exercise can slow the rate of biological aging to some extent. True?
No I don't believe exercise can slow the rate of aging. You need to do Calorie Restriction to do that.... there is always a chance resveratrol 'might' work though.
CR is the ONLY way to slow down primary aging. Slowing down primary aging results in an increase in the maximal lifespan. Exercise can slow down secundary aging which results in an increase in the mean lifespan but NOT in the maximal lifespan.
What about resveratrol and other antioxidants?What about methionine restriction?
resveratrol has not been proven in humans and not everyone is that enthusiastic about res, e.g. http://mfoundation.o...isplay.php?f=48
Although I think some CR devotees underestimate the value of exercise. Even assuming it does 'only' increase mean lifespan, it still improves health and quality of life, thus improving your chances of achieving maximum life span (which may have been already increased by other means, who knows). A better quality of life in the long term equals more productivity and better chances of achieving your goals (e.g. immortality..)
http://www.scienceda...80514064921.htm
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VictorBjoerk 11 Aug 2008
another study point out the value of aerobic exercise in aging........