You
probably do your best to work out when you can, but life has a funny
way of interfering with your ability to log some serious time at the
gym.
Still, when most people do get time, they typically focus on
cardio, like going for a run, biking, or hitting the elliptical, over
lifting weights. But now a new study suggests it’s important to throw
some strength training into the mix too.
The research, which is published in the American Journal of Epidemiology,
followed 80,000 adults and found that people who did strength-based
exercises like push-ups and sit-ups had a 23 percent reduced risk of
premature death and a 31 percent reduced risk of dying from cancer.
As a
result, the researchers argue that strength training might be as
important for your overall health as cardio.
It
doesn’t even take a lot of strength training to reap the benefits: The
study found that people who did two or more sessions of gym-based or
body-weight strength exercises per week were the most likely to have
better health. The researchers also discovered that body-weight strength
exercises (like push-ups, sit-ups, tricep dips, and lunges) were just
as effective as exercises people did on gym equipment, making it easier
for people to get these perks at home.
Strength training tends to be cardio’s neglected counterpart, but it shouldn’t be, Albert Matheny, MS, RD, co-founder of SoHo Strength Lab and adviser to Promix Nutrition,
tells Yahoo Lifestyle. In fact, he points out, you can train your
cardiovascular system at the same time as you’re strength training, but
the reverse is rarely true. And, he adds, you have a lot to gain,
health-wise, from building lean muscle via strength training. “Lean
muscle helps you improve you blood sugar control, increase your
metabolism, and increase you physical strength, and stability,” Matheny
says.
This doesn’t mean you should ditch aerobic exercise entirely. A Mayo Clinic study
published earlier this year found that people who did interval
training, which combines cardio and strength-based exercises, had
improved aerobic capacity, enhanced energy, enlarged muscles, and
decreased markers of aging. “It’s good to do it all,” Bert Mandelbaum,
MD, an orthopedic surgeon at Kerlan-Jobe Institute in Los Angeles, a USA
team doctor at the World Cup and the Olympics, and author of The Win Within: Capturing Your Victorious Spirit,
tells Yahoo Lifestyle. “A combination of interval training that’s not
exclusively aerobic or anaerobic in conjunction with a strength program
seems to be associated with the best health effects.”
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