How Fast Do We Age? Exercise Performance Over Time as a Biomarker
Open Access
- 1 September 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journals of Gerontology: Series A
- Vol. 51A (5) , M223-M225
- https://doi.org/10.1093/gerona/51a.5.m223
Abstract
Background. The rate of true chronologic functional change in humans has been previously obscured by inadvertent inclusion of data derived from sick or ill-conditioned individuals. The Masters athlete fulfills the need for a study cohort. Methods. Performance data by age were collected from recognized certifying organizations for running, rowing, and swimming events and plotted as percent decline from age 35, and a rate of decline of performance by age was plotted. Results. Close coincidence of the decay slopes of the events surveyed was observed. This rate is 0.5% per year. We argue that inasmuch as these strenuous events are subtended by most of the major body systems and are thereby ratelimited by them all, that no supporting system can decline faster than this rate. Conclusion. The virtual identity of the performance slopes of the different athletic events with one another and to that of other functions including that of a central physiologic measure, V̇O2 max, indicates that 0.5% per year may be a basic biomarker of the aging process.Keywords
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