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Health and Fitness News Article - TheraGear Article Resource

Senior Games

Article #33

If you’re over age 50 and not planning to enter the Transplant Games, Paralympics, or Special Olympics--and if you’re not as strong or fast as you once were--we have an Olympics for you: the Senior Olympic Games.

We have the Olympic Games for people at the peak of their athletic ability  who qualify as the very best in their sport. We have the Special Olympics for  individuals with mental handicaps (www.specialolympics.org),  the Paralympic Games for athletes with physical challenges (www.paralympic.org),  and the Transplant Olympics for those who have received a life-supporting organ  (www.wtgf.org).  Now we also have the Senior Olympic Games for folks over 50 who do not qualify  for any of the other Olympic designations.

Senior Games competition is an Olympic-style sports event that promotes healthy  lifestyles for seniors through fitness, sports, active lifestyle, and athletic  competition.

The competition is fair. To keep an 80-year-old from unfairly using her wisdom  and experience to take advantage of a younger, wet-behind-the–ears, 50-year-old  (like me), Senior Games are set in age groups with five-year increments for  men and women: ages 50-54, 55-59, 60-64, all the way up.

The U.S. Olympic Committee sanctions the Senior Games in the U.S., and various  state government agencies, in cooperation with the National Senior Games Office  (www.nsga.com), coordinate  the events.

Senior Games begin at the district level within the states. The top four finishers  in each age group and event advance to the State Games. During the State Senior  Games, the top finishers advance to the National Senior Games held in different  parts of the U.S. every two years.

The next National Senior Games will be in Hampton Roads, Virginia, May 29 through  June 6, 2003. The 2005 National Senior Games will be in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Many sports are offered in the Senior Games: basketball, track & field,  racquetball, road racing, softball, swimming, bowling, tennis, triathlon, volleyball,  archery, badminton, cycling, golf, horseshoes, table tennis, and the Winter  Senior Games currently offer seven events.

Senior Games events are growing. The first-ever Senior Olympic Hockey Championships  were held in 2002 at Lake Placid, New York. The Winter National Senior Games  are held in even-numbered years, and the summer events are held in odd-numbered  years.

Here’s the important part: Why you should seriously consider entering  the local Senor Games in your area?

Why everyone over 50 should be training for the Senior Games.

New biomedical research proves why exercise and activity are so important.

Research discoveries in 2002 show that we can unleash the most powerful body-fat-cutting,  muscle-toning, anti-aging substance known to science, naturally, with specific  types of exercise. The workouts necessary in training for many of the Senior  Games events do the job.

The American Heart Association recently cited research showing that high-intensity  exercise can significantly lower the risk of heart disease. Simply, as exercise  intensity goes up, the risk of heart disease goes down.

The researchers compared the impact of different levels of exercise intensity  on men with an average age of 66. The subjects in the high-intensity exercise  group produced a 31 percent risk reduction for heart disease, which was 14 percent  better than those who performed less intense exercise.

"The harder one exercises ... the lower the risk of heart disease,"  says lead researcher Dr. I-Min Lee, associate professor Harvard Medical School.

Anti-aging exercise

Anaerobic exercise (as contrasted with aerobic exercise) involves short, high-intensity  sprint training, rather than endurance training.

Researchers show that high-intensity anaerobic workouts that include the short-burst  get-you-out-of-breath sprinting types of exercise make your body release significant  amounts of growth hormone (Impact of acute exercise intensity on pulsatile growth  hormone release in men, 2000, Pritzlaff).

As children, growth hormone (HGH) makes us grow taller, but when we reach our  full height, this hormone actually changes roles. When we’re adults, increasing  HGH reduces body fat and trims inches. Growth hormone actually becomes the “fitness  hormone” for middle-aged and older adults.

New studies show that HGH can be increased by as much as 530 percent with the  anaerobic exercise of sprinting, (The time course of the human growth hormone  response to a 6s and a 30s cycle ergometer sprint, 2002, Stokes).

Anaerobic sprint workouts can be involve many sports, including running, swimming,  cycling, cross-country skiing, and all these are Senior Games events.

Whatever you do, don't do this!

Don’t jump in; ease in to anaerobic exercise. Anaerobic fitness training  is clearly the most productive, but it’s also the most dangerous. Hamstring  pulls are a painful potential injury, so flexibility training is essential to  every fitness plan.

Everyone, especially those with heart conditions or medical problems, should  get physician clearance before performing anaerobic exercise. Even young athletes  should progressively ease into high-intensity anaerobic workouts.

Older adults get results with less effort

When you see an 80-year-old participant running a 10-K or working out in the  gym, don't think that it's unfortunate that she can't run as fast or lift as  much as her 60-year-old counterparts. It's easier for her to reach higher intensities.

The American Heart Association study proves that exercise intensity is relative  to a person’s age and fitness level. In other words, an older person can  reach high-intensity levels with an effort level that might be considered low-intensity  for a young athlete.

The new study confirms the need for higher intensities, but it also shows that  beginners and older adults reach the more productive levels of exercise intensity  with less effort than a triathlete, for example.

Newcomers to high-intensity exercise may initially get great results by performing  the anaerobic training with power walking, but a fine-tuned triathlete may need  more work for the same results.

If you’re older than 50, get physician clearance first, select a Senior  Games event or two and get started with a gradual buildup training program.

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Free Newsletter on this topic at www.readysetgofitness.com

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RESEARCH SUMMARIES CITED:

The American Heart Association Release

https://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=3008814  

National Library of Medicine:
 
 
“The GH secretory response to exercise is related to exercise intensity  in a linear dose-response pattern.”
 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=11960957&dopt=Abstract  

“It would appear that the duration of a bout of maximal sprint exercise  determines the magnitude of the HGH.” response…”
 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=12137178&dopt=Abstract  

“GH secretory response to exercise is related to exercise intensity.”  https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=10444604&dopt=Abstract

Additional support studies:

“We conclude that a positive relationship exists between exercise intensity  and both CHO (carbohydrates) expenditure during exercise and fat expenditure  during recovery and that the increase in fat expenditure during recovery with  higher exercise intensities is related to GH release.” https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=10956336&dopt=Abstract

“GH accelerates body fat loss, exerts anabolic effects and improves GH  secretion.” https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=11706505&dopt=Abstract

“Exercise is a robust stimulus of GH secretion.”
 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=12457419&dopt=Abstract

“Total carbohydrate oxidation (exercise plus post-exercise period) was  significantly higher for HIE (high intensity).” https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=9100214&dopt=Abstract

“A minimum duration of 10 min., high-intensity exercise consistently  increased circulating GH in adult males.”
 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=1619005&dopt=Abstract

If you would like to discuss this article click the link below.
worldfitness.com by Phil Campbell, M.S., M.A., FACHE

Senior Games participant and author of
Ready, Set, GO! Synergy Fitness - 2nd Edition