90-120 minutes of strength training per week may help extend lifespan

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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Can 90 minutes of weight lifting weekly actually help protect against heart and brain disease? Oleg Breslavtsev/Getty Images
  • Being physically active has been linked to a longer, healthier life.
  • However, questions remain about what types of exercise are best and how many minutes a week to spend on it for the best results.
  • A new study found that a combination of both high aerobic activity and between 60 and 119 minutes per week of strength training may be best for lowering a person’s mortality risk from any cause.
  • Scientists also found that between 90 and 120 minutes a week of resistance training may also possibly lower a person’s risk of dying from cardiovascular or neurological diseases.

Being physically active has been linked to a longer, healthier life, but what type of exercise is best? Should you focus on aerobic exercises, like walking or running? Or strength training with weights or bodyweight exercises like pilates? And how many minutes of each should you get during the week?

A new study recently published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine helps to provide some guidance and answers to these questions.

Researchers found that a combination of both high aerobic activity and between 60 to 119 minutes a week of strength training may be best for lowering a person’s mortality risk from any cause.

Scientists also found that between 90 to 120 minutes a week of resistance training may also possibly lower a person’s risk of dying from cardiovascular or neurological diseases.

Giovannucci said for the next steps in this research, they will be looking for opportunities to examine resistance training in a more diverse population and in relation to outcomes beyond mortality, such as physical function, independence, and quality of life.

“It will also be important to study resistance training more precisely, including exercise type, intensity, load, and using more objective measures if possible,” he added.

“This study is especially important because it highlights a potential association between resistance training and reduced neurological disease mortality, an area that has received far less attention than cardiovascular disease,” Patel added.

“As our population ages and conditions such as dementia and neurodegenerative diseases become increasingly prevalent, identifying lifestyle interventions that may help preserve neurological health is a major public health priority. The findings suggest that strength training may play a meaningful role in healthy aging beyond simply maintaining muscle mass and mobility.”
— Swapnil Patel, MD, MHCM, FACP

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