Showing posts with label Aging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aging. Show all posts

Thursday, January 11, 2024

How Well Are You Aging? Do You Know Your 'Fitness' Age?

Yesterday, the Washington Post published an article titled How Well Are You Aging? How to Discover Your 'Fitness' Age. According to the article, fitness age is a well-studied scientific concept that uses simple health measures to estimate whether your body is biologically older — or younger — than your chronological age. Studies show that if you’re 50 based on calendar years, you conceivably could have a fitness age of anywhere from about 25 to as old as 75. It all depends on what shape you’re in.

If your fitness age is higher than your chronological age, your chances of dying young from a host of diseases rises substantially, according to a growing body of research. The good news is you can find your fitness age easily using an online tool. And, if it exceeds your calendar age, you can start lowering it today by exercising right. To learn your fitness age, you’ll need to know your height in centimeters, weight in kilograms, and resting heart rate (which you can easily determine using a smartwatch or 15 second pulse test). You’ll also need an honest estimate of how hard and often you exercise.

Since 2019, studies using the calculator’s algorithm have shown that a relatively low fitness age is linked to substantially less long-term risk of heart attack, depression, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, brain shrinkage and dementia in middle-aged and older men and women. Just as important, if you develop a chronic disease, your symptoms are likely to progress more slowly if your fitness age is low.

The current fitness age calculator is free and maintained by the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. First posted in 2013, its been updated and simplified several times and used by about 80 million people around the globe. The calculator is available at https://hvemereldst.no/en/. I'll be 59 years of age in just a couple of months, am active, take no medications, and took the test today. I've taken the test in the past as well. My results today show that I have a 'fitness age' of 48 -- eleven years younger than my chronological age. That's good news!

Wish your own fitness age were years lower than your calendar age? It can be. Just make sure you’re moving often and sometimes vigorously. Up-tempo exercise, the kind that increases your breathing and heart rate enough that you can barely carry on a conversation, strengthens your aerobic system over time and improves your VO2max, altering your fitness age. This type of exercise, though challenging, doesn’t need to be unpleasant. Instead, it can be brief, informal and even fun. Here are a few easy ways to start turning back your fitness clock:

  • If you like to walk, look for a hill and stride to the top as quickly as you can. Return to the base and summit another time or two.
  • If you have access to a treadmill or stationary bike, try 4 x 4 intervals. Ride or run at a relatively difficult pace for 4 minutes, rest by walking or pedaling lightly for 3 minutes and repeat that sequence four times in total.
  • Jump, lunge and bop though a short body weight workout once in a while.

Exerting yourself vigorously for even a few minutes several times a week should soon improve your fitness age. Of course, outside of science fiction, none of us can actually rewind time. A low fitness age doesn’t make us truly younger or guarantee extra decades of life. Multiple factors besides fitness affect how long and well we live, including our genetics, nutrition, income and good or regrettable fortune. Fitness age only gives us a glimpse into whether our bodies seem to be functioning better or worse than those of other people our same calendar age. However, we can use that knowledge to inspire and maybe congratulate ourselves.

Gotta Run,

Paul J. Staso

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Visit my YouTube channel -- https://www.youtube.com/user/pacetrek

Click on any of the links below to see some of my adventure photos:

Friday, February 9, 2018

U.S. Life Expectancy Now at 78 Years



I was reading the other day that rising obesity rates in the U.S. may be responsible for as many as 186,000 deaths per year. Many people are literally eating their way to an early grave! Currently, the life expectancy in the U.S. is around 78 years.

Between 1880 and 1945, U.S. life expectancy rose from 40 to 65 years old. Rising life expectancy preceded the discovery of most antibiotics, vaccines and many modern treatments for cancer, heart disease and kidney failure. However, now we're seeing a decrease in life expectancy (see chart below). Drug and alcohol abuse are often blamed for reductions in life expectancy, particularly among young Americans, but recent research suggests that the U.S. faces multiple challenges when it comes to longevity and public health. For instance, cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of death in America, killing more than 15 times as many people as drug overdoses.

Research shows that 74% of all deaths in the U.S. are caused by heart disease; cancer; unintentional injuries; chronic lower respiratory disease; stroke; Alzheimer’s disease; diabetes; influenza and pneumonia; kidney disease; and, suicide. Major increases in deaths are reported to be unintentional injuries, Alzheimer’s disease and suicide.

From Him, Through Him, For Him (Romans 11:36),

Paul J. Staso
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Visit my YouTube channel -- https://www.youtube.com/user/pacetrek

Click on any of the links below to see some of my adventure photos: