This study evaluates the effect of three different exercise strategies on physical function in older adults. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of three exercise groups: resistance training, moderate-intensity continuous cycling on a stationary bicycle, and high-intensity interval training on a stationary bicycle.
This project is confronting age-related physical disability by optimizing exercise strategies for older adults. Aerobic training is recommended to improve cardiorespiratory (heart and lung) function, while strength training is recommended for muscular function. These exercise effects are necessary for building healthier lives and reducing mortality and disability risk, but most older adults who do exercise typically only perform one type of exercise. In doing so they are missing a key component for healthy aging. This study will address whether stationary-cycling high-intensity interval training results in both cardiorespiratory and muscular improvements, and it will be the first controlled study comparing adaptations to high-intensity interval, aerobic, and strength training in sedentary older adults. It is unclear whether the lack of muscular adaptations to traditional aerobic training is due to the low intensity/high volume model that is currently prescribed, and thus the central hypothesize of the study is that stationary-cycling high-intensity interval training can improve both cardiorespiratory and muscular function. To test this hypothesis, the investigators will measure heart, lung, and muscle function, as well as physical performance in sedentary older adults, before and after 12 weeks of supervised training using one of three exercise strategies; stationary-cycling high-intensity interval training, stationary-cycling moderate-intensity continuous training, or strength training. By comparing the outcomes across these three groups, the investigators will be able to confirm if short intervals of high-intensity exercise can elicit both cardiorespiratory and muscular benefits. This work will demonstrate that older adults can improve their cardiovascular health and muscular strength with a single exercise strategy. Establishing in detail the cardiovascular and muscular benefits of this exercise can lead to the implementation of new and improved exercise guidelines for cardiovascular health and reduced physical disability in older adults. Incidentally, it will also provide a framework for future studies to investigate the importance of intensity in exercise. At the end of this study the investigators will be able to disseminate a new evidence-based exercise protocol that will address a significant barrier to healthy aging.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
30
Exercise intervention designed to improve muscular strength and power
Exercise intervention designed to improve cardiorespiratory fitness and muscular endurance
Exercise intervention designed to improve cardiorespiratory fitness, muscular endurance, and muscular strength and power
Ohio University
Athens, Ohio, United States
Maximal Oxygen Consumption
The primary endpoint is maximal oxygen consumption measured by both relative and absolute changes in maximal oxygen consumption obtained during a graded exercise test on a cycle ergometer.
Time frame: Change from baseline at 12 weeks
Knee extensor isokinetic power
Maximal muscle power (maximal torque in foot-pounds) of the quadriceps using an isokinetic dynamometer
Time frame: Change from baseline at 12 weeks
Knee extensor isometric force production
Maximal muscle strength of the quadriceps (in foot-pounds) as measured by an isometric dynamometer
Time frame: Change from baseline at 12 weeks
Knee extensor isokinetic endurance
Total power output (cumulative torque in foot-pounds) produced from 120 consecutive maximal knee extensions using an isokinetic dynamometer
Time frame: Change from baseline at 12 weeks
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