Dr. James Steele, author of a provocative study urging public health officials to update government fitness guidelines and practices.

Is it wrong to love cardio-running, biking, swimming, hiking?  These are all my favorite ways to exercise. And, according to most national public health guidelines, this is as much as I need to do.

In fairness, U.S. guidelines, as opposed to the guidelines of many other countries do also recommend strength training but that message is too often lost when a physician says you need to start exercising. What they usually mean, and prescribe, is some form of gentle cardio when it turns out higher intensity exercise along with strength training are actually much better options, even for cardiac patients, for all the reasons you’ll soon hear about in the podcast.

James Steele, Associate Professor of Sport and Exercise Science at Southampton Solent University in the UK is the lead author of a paper that appeared last year in BMC Public Health calling for greater emphasis and follow-through by public health officials and doctors in recommending a larger role for higher intensity exercise as well as strength and resistance training.

Dr. Steele is not only an up-and-coming researcher. He practices what he prescribes and has personally worked with Ironman athletes, American Football and professional soccer athletes and Muay Thai fighters.

I was intrigued by the study’s conclusions and disappointed that so little has been done to endorse and publicize the limitations of current exercise recommendations. As is too often the case science supersedes policy and government is woefully slow to catch up.

So it’s up to us to find out what the latest research has discovered and to incorporate the best science into our own practices. Dr. Steele in this podcasts makes a compelling case for a new paradigm for physical activity and gives us both the science behind this thinking as well as specific actions we can take.

I really enjoyed talking with Dr. Steele and hope you enjoy the conversation too. Also check out the show notes and resources for additional information.

I’d be very interested in your comments and what you found most interesting and or useful. Thanks in advance!

Resources

The paper in BMC Public Health which first brought Dr. Steele to my attention: A higher effort-based paradigm in physical activity and exercise for public health: making the case for a greater emphasis on resistance training

Video of Dr. Steele training at home – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3MHu8EnHKFg&t= and also another of him training in a gym doing bodyweight work –https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n0u7tgOaxcQ&t=

If you’d like to hear more from Dr. Steele listen to the interview with Lawrence Neal at Corporate Warrior – http://www.15minutecorporatewarrior.com/podcast/james-steele-maximizing-muscle-gain/ 

To read about a minimal dose approach to resistance training for the older adult; the prophylactic for aging go to– https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S053155651730503X

Another fascinating study, not yet published comparing the benefits of resistance training vs. cardio over similar durations and intensities – https://osf.io/preprints/sportrxiv/c6rh5

Some of Dr. Steele’s current favorite podcasts (other than AgeStronger) are: You Are Not So Smart podcast https://youarenotsosmart.com/podcast/, Everything Hertz https://soundcloud.com/everything-hertz, and Very Bad Wizards (perhaps a bit NSFW – https://verybadwizards.fireside.fm/

In terms of exercise and health related podcasts he likes Guru Performance https://guruperformance.com/podcasts/,  and The Body of Evidence http://www.bodyofevidence.ca/

Interested in connecting or learning more? Follow Dr. Steele on Twitter @jamessteeleii

Show Notes

Resistance training produces high quality outcomes with low volume. 5:30

How this addresses concerns of time and accessibility 5:47

Doctors prescribe aerobic exercise 59% of time vs. only 13% for resistance training 7:47

Why doctors make so few recommendations for physical activity of any kind versus changes in diet 8:23

The lack of physician training about benefits of physical activity 8:37

Most physicians don’t feel competent enough in their knowledge to make recommendations around physical activity 9:02

Low to modest levels of physical activity do not reduce mortality rates 11:22

Two camps of thought: those trying to just get people active and those who want to maximize exercise outcomes 13:59

The strongest predictors for health and longevity 17:57

Why is there such a strong correlation between cardiorespiratory fitness and mortality? 20:00

Results of the Church Study: Increased effort did not increase health benefit 21:20

The benefits of low intensity exercise and limitations 23:41

The best approach 24:00

Defining high intensity resistance training 26:33

The use of light weights vs heavy weights 29:49

The orthopedic concerns over using heavy weights, especially for older athletes 31:00

The problem with training to failure with low loads 32:31

Why are compliance rates for weight lifting so low among men and women and why don’t public health officials encourage its adoption to a greater degree? 35:41

Evidence suggesting strength may be the most important factor in improving health span 37:14

Countries leading the way in promoting strength fitness 38:23

What can be done to encourage more resistance training acceptance? 42:45

What to focus on with resistance training. 46:40

The hardest area to train using bodyweight exercises. 50:57

A new study on high effort resistance training for the elderly. 58:40

Why Steele prefers resistance exercise over other exercises. 1:01:53



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We swallow greedily any lie that flatters us, but we sip only little by little at a truth we find bitter.
Denis Diderot

It is so much more difficult to live with one’s body than with one’s soul. One’s body is so much more exacting: what it won’t have it won’t have, and nothing can make bitter into sweet.
D. H. Lawrence

I spent most of my youngest days growing up in Kansas. I remember little of my education there except the almost endless days of sitting at a tight wooden desk watching the window and what beckoned outside. I do remember one fall day that was dedicated to learning about our state and, while much seemed mundane and only marginally interesting, I was both fascinated and irritated by the state’s motto: Ad astra per aspera.

To the stars through difficulty. What a disappointment. As a motto it didn’t seem particularly inspiring, and why give difficulty such a prominent, assumed role in such an otherwise noble aspiration?

But then, of course, I grew up. Thinking back on that motto I have a new appreciation for not only its sentiments but for its unwavering truth. What I’ve wanted to achieve, whatever distant illumination I might have aspired to, resided across a chasm of difficulty.

I don’t want to belabor this personal disappointment. Many of you have understood it well before I and have had either the wisdom or stern discipline to do what I’ve too often rebelled at undertaking.

Which brings me oddly enough to exercise.

I’ve loved exercising, for sport and pleasure, but mostly for pleasure. I’ve loved long ambling runs on high mountain trails and bike rides that floated across endless plains.

But as I’ve aged those indulgences have come at a higher price. A two-hour run, when I can still attempt it, risks injury and necessitates days of recovery while long bike rides likewise demand a certain amount of preparation, to say nothing of long recovery naps.

The commitment and consistency and the volume of effort needed to sustain even a basic level of athleticism seems to be slipping farther away each day. I’m resigned to that fact, that difficulty.

Yet it seems that within this difficulty itself there is a partial and admittedly temporary solution. According to an increasing amount of research, most recently advanced by the esteemed Mayo Clinic, there is a way of still seeing the starlight. But as you may have suspected that view requires what many will be reluctant to provide.

I’m talking, as you probably guessed, about HIIT, which stands for high intensity interval training. Pronounced ‘hit’ this form of exercise strips activity of all its leisurely affections and lays bare what is required to slow down the processes of aging while dramatically improving physiology and athletic performance.

The rub? Well, it’s not much fun. In fact, it works in direct linear proportion to how willing you are to make it difficult, really difficult. Before you stop reading and hurry off in search of an easier prescription, let me just say there is some good news.

You can gradually increase the difficulty and I can attest with some hard won experience that your body, probably much like mine, is a crazy thing. After some acclimation, which is both wise and necessary, your body, if not your mind, may begin to actually crave this high-spirited if short-lived exuberance. Or, maybe it won’t.

But if you can cajole your body to try, and then tease it to stay with it, magic happens, or at least as close to legal athletic and age reversal magic as we can currently get.

Yesterday I talked with 36 year old Matthew Robinson PhD, an assistant professor of kinesiology at Oregon State University and a former Mayo Clinic researcher. As a Colorado State University undergrad he was a competitive mountain biker who became intrigued with what happens to muscles as they age. “I wanted to have a better understanding of how muscles change and what are some of the metabolic consequences of aging,” he told me.

Teaming up with noted Mayo endocrinologist K. Sreekumaran Nair M.D., PhD, he authored an acclaimed study that recently appeared in Cell Metabolism. You will no doubt be hearing a lot about their findings, which are already making waves in academic and athletic circles. (The New York Times finally woke up to this story after you read about it here first.)

While the gist of the study is fairly straightforward it’s their conclusions which require some parsing, particularly if you aren’t a bio-gerontologist or have a degree in biochemistry.

The researchers assembled 72 non-athletically trained adults and divided them into two age groups, a young group (18-30) and an older group (65-78) with a median age of 69. It’s this older group that we are, of course, most interested in.

Each group took part in one of three different exercise protocols for a 12-week period. One group did strength training with weights, another group did a combined strength-training and cycling regimen and the last group did high intensity cycling.

The high intensity cyclers only worked out for three days a week. After a warm-up they rode hard for four minutes and then had a three minute recovery. They did this four times for a total high-intensity workload of only 16 minutes per workout.

“I was most interested in how muscles renew themselves,” said Robinson. “One of the theories of muscle aging is that as muscles get older their proteins accumulate damage as part of normal cellular processes.” This damage he said is like rust on a car. The big question he wanted to answer is, can intense exercise figuratively remove some of this rust and improve the protein turnover process?

The short answer is yes. But what was most surprising is how much the older group improved and the significance of those improvements. “What was most striking was how robustly the older group responded to the exercise interventions,” said Robinson. Improvements were seen across the board with all three exercise protocols but the high intensity exercisers saw the greatest benefits by far. “We anticipated they would have gains but we thought it would be a blunted response,” he said. Instead the older exercisers had similar gains in a number of variables, mirroring those experienced by the younger people.

This study, as have others, demonstrated that muscles continue to adapt well to exercise. What this study demonstrated is that this improvement can be tied to ribosomal protein enhancement leading to strengthened mitochondrial function. I didn’t understand the significance of that until Robinson explained, “Mitochondia are important contributors to supplying muscular energy. They play an important role in aerobic performance.” Our mitochondria lose their robustness as we age and this loss of functioning contribute to a lack of strength and athletic performance.

In essence, what was discovered is that this kind of training provokes a strong anti-aging response. Consider that for a moment. There are currently no valid, clinically proven anti-aging compounds that you can safely take. None that I’m aware of. But by undertaking a high intensity exercise program you can literally turn back the clock on a number of core metabolic functions.

The older exercisers improved functioning in these areas by 69 percent. According to Robinson this put them, by the end of the study, at the same level as were the 18-30-year olds before they began exercising. “The exercise training was able to normalize mitochondrial function to a younger age. These exercises increased the body’s machinery for making new proteins. And this is very beneficial for aging,” he said. You should also note that the less vigorous exercisers demonstrated far fewer benefits.

Now here’s a scary bit of news. A control group, which did no exercise for 12 weeks was also monitored and the testing was done with such a high degree of clinical accuracy that they could measure how this group had aged during that time. So the saying, use it or lose it, was quite literally true.

The older groups also increased lean muscle mass by nearly a kilogram (2.2 pounds) over this short time period, which is also significant because as you know we start losing muscle mass in our 30s, a process called sarcopenia that accelerates as we age. The gain in muscle was “quite remarkable” according to Robinson.

According to Dr. Nair, combining HIIT training with two or three days of strength training may be an ideal way to slow down the effects of aging.

Coach and author Joe Friel, in his book Fast after 50: How to Race Strong for the Rest of Your Life, offers similar prescriptions and cites a number of older athletes who have maintained stellar levels of performance, to say nothing of V02max, by incorporating interval training.

What this study does is really two fold. It points to some of the most vital metabolic processes that govern aging and limit athletic performance. It furthers demonstrates how they are affected by intense exercise and it suggests that as athletes we can benefit by increasing our dosage.

The concern, for me and my older friends, is that such intensity may lead to injury. “It’s true that as intensity increases the risk of injury goes up,” says Robinson, “so you really need to consult with your physician before undertaking anything like this.” It’s telling, however, that none of the study participants, who all eased into the training, suffered any injuries. And while intensity is going up, volume, or the amount of total time spent exercising dramatically goes down. That’s where my friends, who not only enjoy being fit, but crave being out for an extended period of time, could get into trouble.

One last thing: The HIIT group saw significant improvements in insulin sensitivity, which could lower diabetes risk and help facilitate weight loss.

So I wonder, if they could create a pill that would do away with the difficulty, would you take it?

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