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Fitness at 50+: Five Barriers You Can
Beat
While exercise is often touted as a
fountain of youth, it often gets harder to do as you get
older.
Physical medicine and rehabilitation (PM&R) physicians,
also called physiatrists, are doctors who restore and
maintain function lost due to injury, illness and
age-related conditions such as osteoporosis, arthritis,
joint replacements or stroke. They often prescribe
exercise to prevent and treat many of these conditions,
working with their older patients to help them get the
right kind of exercise so that they can remain active
and independent. PM&R physicians offer these tips to
help caregivers and their loved ones overcome five
common fitness obstacles:
OBSTACLE: Declining strength
What you can do: Use your endurance. It’s true we lose
muscle mass as we age, and older people have been told
that weight training will help prevent this loss of
strength and keep them young. However, many seniors find
they can’t lift the heavy weight experts say is
necessary to actually build muscle. A recent study has
shown that while muscle strength diminishes with age,
muscle endurance does not. You may benefit from working
muscles longer - doing more repetitions - with lighter
weights. Exercises that emphasize endurance, such as
swimming, walking or biking, may be more enjoyable and
beneficial for you and your loved one than those that
require great strength.
OBSTACLE: Arthritis or other conditions that make moving
difficult
What you can do: Your loved one can, and should, still
exercise. Ask your doctor, or physical therapist, about
how to use a cane, rollator (rolling walker) or other
assistive device. These can be especially helpful when
recovering from a joint replacement, or a serious
illness such as stroke or cancer. Another condition that
becomes more common as we age is neuropathy, which is
nerve damage in the feet and extremities that makes it
difficult to maintain balance and walk steadily. For all
of these conditions, assistive devices can keep your
loved one active while helping to prevent a fall and
further injury.
OBSTACLE: Exercise and activity after surgery
What you can do: Follow your doctor’s orders, but the
best general rule is to get your loved one moving as
soon as possible. The type of surgery you had and the
type of exercise planned will influence when you should
start exercising after an operation. But a recent study
found that people who began physical rehabilitation two
days after heart surgery recovered faster than those who
delayed. PM&R physicians say keeping active becomes more
important as the body ages and loses its ability to
recover. The longer you delay returning to activity, the
more difficult it will be to regain fitness.
OBSTACLE: A history of inactivity
What you can do: Get started on the path to fitness by
using everyday activities as exercise. Recent studies
have shown that “functional exercises,” those that mimic
actual daily activities such as walking up stairs and
getting in and out of chairs, can be most effective for
you. Climbing a flight of stairs several times or
repeatedly rising from and returning to a seated
position is an effective way to build leg strength. As
you become stronger and more fit, increase the challenge
by holding some sort of weight on your shoulders, like
soup cans. PM&R physicians say that even mundane
household chores such as transferring wet laundry from
the washer to the dryer, one piece at a time, can be
used to increase strength and flexibility in your
abdominal, low back and hip muscles. Once you've
established a routine of exercise, functional fitness
exercises can also be used to maintain your health.
OBSTACLE: Chronic pain and inflammation
What you can do: Choose low impact activities to keep
moving and minimize pain. Experts say that certain types
of exercise can reduce joint stiffness, pain and
inflammation associated with arthritis conditions that
affect more than 40 million Americans. A PM&R physician
can advise you on the exercise best suited for your
arthritis, but activities such as walking, swimming and
water-based exercise are generally effective and well
tolerated. PM&R physicians also advise arthritic
patients to take breaks from long periods of sitting so
that joints don’t become stiff and painful.
For More Information
If you or your loved one face chronic pain or other
medical conditions, consult a PM&R physician who can
help you overcome obstacles and develop a realistic and
effective fitness program. PM&R physicians are experts
at diagnosing pain and restoring function, treating the
whole patient, not just symptoms. Many recommend a
simple tool to help aid accurate diagnosis, development
of tailored and effective treatment and evaluation of
progress: keep a log of daily activity, pain and
questions that you bring with you to appointments with
PM&R physicians or other doctors.
This article is provided by the American Academy of
Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation. For more information
or to find a PM&R physician near you go to their website
www.aapmr.org. You can also request a copy of a free
brochure with more information on physiatry by writing
to the American Academy of Physical Medicine &
Rehabilitation, One IBM Plaza, Suite 2500, Chicago, IL,
60611.
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