Fitness & Exercise Stop Your Muscles From Wasting
Away
However, many older women do not believe they can perform
weight training exercise and quite honestly, think of every excuse
not to.
Don't you think that it would be great if you were capable
of doing the many leisure time activities you want to throughout
your entire life?

Here's a summary of some research on this topic:
1) Muscular strength and endurance of women can increase
significantly through participation in a 12-week resistance-training
program (weight lifting).
2) Skeletal muscle of women in all age groups adjusts
to resistance training by increasing strength and size. The
major difference is the increased length of time required
by older women to fully recovery from weight lifting.
3) Some older women who walk with the help of walkers
can improve strength necessary to convert from the use of
a walker to the use of a cane through regular resistance exercise.
4) In a group of women 72-94 years of age that I trained
for a 12-week program, three-times a week with both resistance
and cardiovascular exercises, all more than doubled the strength
in their leg and hip muscles.
5) It is believed that the main cause of loss of strength
in older women is lack of activity - most notably progressive
resistance overload.
6) Muscle strength of older women increases quickly
during the initial three months of training, then levels out.
7) Women can carry out prolonged moderate to high
intensity resistance training with reasonable compliance and
resulting slow-and fast-twitch muscle fiber enlargement.
8) Exercise has shown to be an effective means of
weight-control by increasing energy requirements (at rest
and during exercise), decreasing body fat, and maintaining
metabolically active tissue in healthy women of all ages.
9) Elastic tubing, even though heavily promoted as
being effective, is very ineffective at improving balance,
strength, and walking ability in older women. However, free
weights and resistance exercise in general are effective.
10) Women of all ages (16 - 68) that I've worked with
over the years with strength and aerobic conditioning for
a minimum of 6 months have shown to increase strength (5-65%),
decrease body fat and increase fat free mass and have done
it without any injury.

Fitness & Exercise Stop Your Muscles From Wasting
Away
It doesn't matter if you're 40 years old or 75 years old.
If you don't build muscle, you'll lose muscle. Exercise and
fitness programs have often disregarded the importance and
usefulness of weight lifting for older women.
Why is added muscular strength so important and why should
women of all ages wish to strength train?
Exercise and fitness will help you to increase the range
of movement, increase lean muscle, strengthen bones, muscles,
tendons, ligaments, improves your ability to do everyday,
improves health, helps prevent accidents, injuries, and sickness,
and speeds rehabilitation.
Resistance training helps women tone, shape and strengthen
muscle fibers, minimizing the "fatty marbling" within
the muscle that results in a flabby, weak muscle.
Equally as important, having more strength and endurance
makes daily activities easier and less tiring, thereby increasing
or maintaining stamina.
In addition, not only will you increase lean muscle mass
and overall body strength, but the benefits of exercise also
include increased metabolic rate and increased bone density.
Women who exercise on a regular basis with both resistance
training (weight lifting) and cardio-vascular exercise are
able to perform more work without tiring and are less likely
to sustain fractures resulting from osteoporotic conditions.
So, what happens when the body you once knew begins to acquire
a different shape and doesn't respond to activities and physical
exertion as it once did when you were 20 years old?
Unfortunately, you can't change the fact that you'll age,
but you can control, to some degree, the rate at which you
age.
A lot of women unwisely decrease their activity level as
they grow older, assuming its proper to grow old gracefully.
Regrettably, they grow old ungracefully, with considerable
restrictions on their mobility, self-reliance, and quality
of life.
From adulthood into middle age, you will lose approximately
6.6 pounds of lean muscle mass during each decade of life.
Numerous studies indicate that muscle mass may decline by
20% to 40% between age 20 and age 65.
These changes have been attributed to a reduction in muscle
fiber number and size and reduced nerve innervation, and are
correlated with functional declines in muscle strength and
endurance in older women.
As you grow older, physical activity,
particularly strength training, appears to be the best method
to decelerate the adverse effects of aging. This is strength
for living! The few minutes of work you do with weights a
few days a week will equal benefits every hour of your day
and night, awake and asleep.
While you may now realize that weight training is something
that must be done, you may be at a loss when it comes to selecting
proper exercise equipment to help you reach your goals. Unfortunately,
not every one has the time to go to a gym 4 to 5 days a week.
Most gyms today are very over crowded so you can't get a proper
workout anyway.
This is one of the reasons why so many women have chosen
to buy exercise equipment and workout at home. But with all
of the thousands of different pieces of exercise equipment
out there, how are you to know what to use?
Not all equipment is created equal. Just because a salesperson
in an exercise equipment store tells you that you need it,
it doesn't mean that you do. When you go into any exercise
equipment store you'll see lots and lots of different pieces
of fancy, shiny exercise equipment. If the salesperson doesn't
sit down with you to discuss your goals and evaluate them
with you, (which none of these people anywhere has ever done)
it's impossible for them to know what is right for you.
Their only agenda is to sell you as much as they can, regardless
if it will help you or not!
Remember, they're just trying to get a sale, they're not
interested in listening to your needs.
About the Author Phil Beckett is the author of The New Women's Guide To
Successful Weight Loss & Fitness. He's helped thousands
of women with their weight loss, health & fitness goals
over the past 14 years.
Visit http://www.womens-health-fitness.com
to contact Phil Beckett of Physique Concepts for more information. Copyright © Physique Concepts Inc.
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