Fight Muscle Loss: Lift Weights
When you think
of a typical older person, one thing likely comes to mind: frailty. Even if you can’t really identify any obvious
illness, there is something about most elderly people that communicates frailty
and weakness. They probably walk slowly,
move carefully and let others do many things for them, rather than doing those
things themselves.
What is
it?
It’s muscle
loss, otherwise known as sarcopenia. And
if you are 25 years old or older, it is happening to you already.
But you don’t
have to take it sitting down (pun intended).
What is sarcopenia?
Sarcopenia
refers to the process of losing skeletal muscle mass and strength. “Sarco” is the Greek word referring to flesh,
and “penia” means a reduction in amount.
Thus, the word describes a progressive weakening of the body caused by a
“change in body compensation in favor of
fat and at the expense of muscle.”1
Everyone,
beginning around age 25, starts to lose muscle mass, though the actual symptoms
of this loss do not usually begin showing up until around the age of 40 or so. The
process begins really picking up speed after the age of 65. In fact,
around the age of 40, most women will lose almost a half-pound of muscle every
year and replace it with fat.2
The result of
this gradual loss of muscle is an insidious weakening of the body, loss of
balance, loss of confidence upon walking, and a reduced ability to recover from
near falls. As we lose strength, we become
more inactive. This makes sense, because
if we have less muscle, it takes much more effort to move, and we fatigue more
easily. But also, with loss of strength
comes loss of balance and stability. The
fear of falling keeps many people sedentary.
And a sedentary lifestyle opens the door for chronic illness.
Take back your muscle
And now for
great news: you can delay sarcopenia and
even reverse it. How? By lifting weights. Even though you cannot grow new muscles cells
to replace the ones you have already lost, you can develop the ones that you
have left. In fact, you can become
stronger than you ever have in your life by simply beginning a strength
training program.
No matter how
old you are, it is not too late to start.
Even patients in nursing homes have seen transformation. After strength training, bedridden patients
were able to begin walking with walkers, walker-dependent patients graduated to
canes, and so on.3
And no matter
how young you are, it is not too early to start! By starting early, you can significantly
delay the effects of sarcopenia.
As you begin lifting weights, you will
notice a transformation in your body. You will have more energy, you will perform
everyday tasks with noticeably more ease and your clothes will begin sagging on
you, because you will be building muscle and burning up the fat deposits. You will have greater balance and more
confidence.
And perhaps
best of all is the insurance policy you pay premiums on every time you choose
to lift, because you are laying a strong, solid foundation for your later
years. You are laying up health,
independence and the ability to live
well, not just long.
Don’t let
another day go by that you are losing muscle.
Take it back, and get ready to feel better than you ever have!
Sources:
1 Biomarkers by William Evans Ph.D. and Irwin
Rosenberg M.D. Page 23.
2 Strong
Women Stay Young by
Miriam E. Nelson Ph.D. Page 22.
3 Younger Next Year for Women by Chris
Crowley and Harry S. Lodge M.D. Page 178
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