December 29, 2012
Intense exercise works toward stronger bones
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Exercise involving running and jumping do more than walking to increase bone development and strength. Clipart.com photo.
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What I found most enlightening about my conversation with Kohrt, who has written numerous scientific studies on the subject, is it's not just weightlifting that can reap bone benefits.

"Forces can be introduced to the skeleton in two ways," she said. "Ground reaction force" is the effect of your body contacting the ground, which includes walking, running and jumping. Resistance training (weightlifting), by comparison, involves "joint reaction force," "which is muscle pulling on bone," Kohrt explained.

She said most of the research focused on the effect of resistance training on bone formation, "But studies comparing resistance training with endurance exercise show no evidence one is better than the other. A vigorous endurance program -- running, jogging, doing stairs, plyometrics, etc. -- can have similar increases in bone density."

And in some cases, endurance can be better for older populations, at least to start, because the most beneficial resistance training exercises, such as squats, can be a challenge.

So what are the benefits of exercise on new bone development?

"We generated increases in the neighborhood of 2 percent," Kohrt said. That sounds ... pathetic. But wait!

Kohrt explained exercise elicits similar bone growth improvements, as do medications, but the true difference lies not in the increase in bone density, but in bone strength. With drugs, it's a 1-1 ratio. If you increase density 2 percent, you increase strength 2 percent. With exercise, and this is being conservative, it's a tenfold difference. Kohrt explained a 2 percent increase in bone mass can translate into a 20 percent increase in bone strength, and perhaps as much as 40 percent.

It's important to note these are animal studies, because, well ... they needed to break the bones to find out how strong they are. Not many people volunteer for those kinds of studies.

"When you exercise, the stresses only occur in the regions of the skeleton that experience that stress," Kohrt explained. Drugs aren't targeted, but if there are specifically weak areas of your skeleton, you can give them extra attention via focused training. That's good.

Kohrt spoke of epidemiological studies on actual people. "Almost all studies found the most physically active people had a 40 percent less risk of hip fracture than the least active ones." So even doing dangerous things on slippery surfaces, they're still at less risk of needing that bionic hip than those who sit around.

Kohrt explained you'll see more results as you ramp up the intensity of your workout. Running and jumping are going to do more than walking, and heavier lifting will generate a better result than lighter loads. "We start people off with moderate lifting, but work them up to where they can only lift it six to eight times and then are fatigued," she said. Less important is volume; 75 minutes of vigorous or 150 minutes of moderate exercise is enough. "The bottom line is anything is better than nothing."

"I recommend they engage in a variety of activities," Kohrt told me. "People become unidirectional as they age." Instead, they need to move in multiple directions, carefully pushing the limits of twisting, turning and lunging to keep the entire system strong.

And less breakable.

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