Literature DB >> 1727835

Low to moderate intensity endurance training in healthy older adults: physiological responses after four months.

J D Posner1, K M Gorman, L Windsor-Landsberg, J Larsen, M Bleiman, C Shaw, B Rosenberg, J Knebl.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the physiological adaptations in previously sedentary healthy older men and women (mean age = 68) to a 16-week low-to-moderate-intensity exercise program.
DESIGN: Randomized, controlled trial.
SETTING: An exercise facility and testing laboratory in a gerontological research institute. PARTICIPANTS: Two-hundred forty-seven community-dwelling older persons free of significant cardiovascular, pulmonary, or uncontrolled metabolic disease, anemia, electrolyte abnormality, resting BP of 165/90 or greater, or chronic disease affecting the ability to exercise on a bicycle. INTERVENTION: Subjects were randomly assigned to either an exercise (n = 166) or attention control group (n = 81). Exercisers trained thrice weekly for 40 minutes on a cycle ergometer (5-minute warm up, 30 minutes at training heart rate (THR), 5-minute cool down). THR was set at 70% of peak heart rate attained on a maximal exercise test (mean = 115 +/- 15). Control subjects attended weekly group talks. Testing took place before and after the program.
RESULTS: Peak attained oxygen uptake (VO2max) increased 8.5% in exercisers and decreased slightly in controls (p less than .001) and oxygen uptake at ventilatory threshold (VeT VO2) increased by 3.5% in exercisers and decreased by 3% in controls (p less than .001). This pattern of a greater increase in VO2max than VeT VO2 is different from that seen in young and middle-aged subjects.
CONCLUSION: This study demonstrated that a large scale training program is feasible for healthy older people, that physiologic improvements can be measured after 16 weeks of low-to-moderate-intensity training, and that mechanisms of adaptation to exercise may be different in elderly subjects from those in younger ones.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1727835     DOI: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.1992.tb01820.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Geriatr Soc        ISSN: 0002-8614            Impact factor:   5.562


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