Weight Training May Be Muscles' 'Fountain of Youth'

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Weight Training May Be Muscles' 'Fountain of Youth'

(Health Day News) -- Pumping iron can literally rejuvenate seniors' muscles -- reversing the aging process within the tissue and improving people's ability to perform physical tasks, new research shows.

In the study, American and Canadian researchers examined gene expression in the thigh muscle tissue of 25 healthy older adults over age 65 (average age 70) who performed resistance training twice a week for six months. They then compared the results to tissue taken from younger adults, ages 20 to 35.

Each training session was an hour-long and involved 30 contractions of each targeted muscle group.

Reporting in the May 23 issue of the online journal PLoS One, the team found that resistance training resulted in a reversal of the "genetic fingerprint" of muscle tissue in older adults, returning them to levels that are similar to those seen in younger adults.

The study also looked at muscle strength. Before they began resistance training, the older adults' muscle strength was an average of 59 percent weaker than the younger adults. But the exercise program boosted the older adults' muscle strength by about 50 percent. That meant that by the end of six months, they were only 38 percent weaker than the younger adults.

"We were fairly surprised by the results of the study," co-author Simon Melov of the Buck Institute for Age Research in California, said in a prepared statement. "We expected to see gene expressions that stayed fairly steady in the older adults. The fact that their “genetic fingerprints” so dramatically reversed course gives credence to the value of exercise, not only as a means of improving health but of reversing the aging process itself, which is an additional incentive to exercise as you get older."

The researchers are planning further studies to examine whether resistance training has any genetic impact on other types of tissue (such as organs) and whether endurance training (running, cycling) affects genetics and aging.
 
i just skimmed it, but if what i got from it is the point, then it makes sense.



that is, that you need to cause microtears to spur growth or else your muscles become old and useless. i'd like to say its analogous to skin shedding and regrowth, although that's overly primative. the point is that something needs to tear that shit up, or else it gets fucked.
 
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