Category Archives: fitness

Osteoporosis — Is Weight Training the solution?

Every 5 minutes, someone is admitted to hospital with an osteoporotic fracture.

Is weight training the solution?

With two-thirds of women and one-third of men over 60 suffering an osteoporotic fracture, the race is on to find a way to reverse bone damage. Beverley Hadgraft investigates:

Whenever associate professor Belinda Beck hears of another school that’s banned kids from doing cartwheels or playing on the monkey bars, she despairs. Why? Because for every child who suffers an injury from such activities, 10,000 more will benefit in terms of reducing their future risk of osteoporosis just my doing weight-bearing and osteogenic exercises (specific to bone development – such as twisting, turning and jumping) at an age when it really matters, she says.

Beck, who’s a professor at the Centre for Musculoskeletal Research at the Griffith Health Institute in Queensland, says most of our lifelong bone mass is built before the age of 20. “You can increase your bone bank to such an extent during that period that when you start losing bone – as everyone does – your bone mass never falls below the fracture threshold,” she explains. This means you’re less likely to develop osteoporosis, the disease in which bones weaken and are more prone to fracture.

While this is good advice for our kids, what does it mean for the current osteoporosis epidemic in adults? Every five to six minutes, someone is admitted to an Australian hospital with an osteoporotic fracture, and this is set to rise to every three to four minutes by 2021.

The Potential Benefits

So can bone density be increased later in life? “That’s the million-dollar question that we need more research on,” Beck says. For this reason, she and her team have recruited 100 post-menopausal women with low bone mass for an exercise study, with the aim of finding out if it’s possible to increase bone density through serious weight training.

In the past, heavy weight training has been discouraged for those with osteoporosis because lifting heavy weights incorrectly can crush the vertebrae (and anyone with low bone density shouldn’t embark on a weightlifting program unless it’s properly supervised and they’ve spoken to their GP or specialist). However, Beck became interested in the idea of using such training as a treatment after hearing of a Queensland woman with osteoporosis whose bone density had improved through lifting weights.

Seven years ago, Gold Coast Olympic weightlifter Lisa Weis was approached by the woman, who’d read that lifting weights might improve her condition. Weis, who has a degree in human movement, agreed to teach her the correct technique, and showed her how to keep her back straight and core engaged, and use compound movements such as squats, deadlifts, push-ups and chin-ups.

After subsequent scans revealed that the woman’s bone density had improved, Weis chose to become a specialist in helping osteoporotic women improve their condition. “I now have women in their 60’s who can effortlessly deadlift 60kg or 70kg and do chin-ups,” Weis says. “And a 74-year-old who can deadlift her bodyweight.”

That’s a good outcome in itself, she says, as it improves mobility and therefore the chances of independent living in older age.  However, equally impressive have been her clients’ scans which, she says, have shown a halt in bone decline and even increases in bone density – one woman saw an increase of 5.8 per cent – without medication.

Protecting Your Bones

Given the unpleasant side-effects of the current medication used to treat osteoporosis, Beck says that finding a non-pharmacological treatment would benefit thousands of Australians. When Weis first approached Beck with her findings, the researcher admits she wasn’t sure what to make of the results, but says now that Weis is “using very correct technique so it’s possible that she’s using a strategy that’s safe and effective”.

The Griffith study will see one group of women do a supervised resistance training program, while the other will do a home-based controlled exercise program, twice a week for eight months. Calcium intake will be monitored, and the participants will then be tested for improvement in bone strength, body composition and physical function.

In the meantime, Beck says we should all be actively working to reduce our osteoporosis risk. Weight-bearing exercise such as brisk walking, jogging, skipping and dancing, and resistance training such as lifting hand weights or ankle weights, have been found to improve bone density. Her earlier research has also shown that regular stomping can help to maintain bone density, and she says a way to incorporate this into daily life is to stomp every morning while you clean your teeth.

Other proven ways to reduce your risk include eating a healthy diet with three to five serves of calcium-rich food (at least 1000mg) a day – such as dairy products, legumes and oily fish – and getting enough vitamin D from safe sun exposure.

IF YOU HAVE OSTEOPOROSIS

It’s important to consult your doctor or physiotherapist about any exercise regime. Don’t attempt heavy lifting, jumping, twisting or jarring without medical advice.

Heart Rates—how and why

  Heart Rates how and why 

Taking student heart rates (heart beats per minute) throughout class has always been an integral and a serious part of Jacki’s Aerobic Dancing. Tracking your heart rate

  • enables you to monitor the level of your workout.
  • ensures your instructor that you are working at a level that is effective and safe for you.

Most students find their pulse by placing the first two fingers of either hand on one of the two carotid arteries, located in the neck straight down from each eye. Alternatively, you may place your fingers on the pulse at your wrist, or your hand over your heart. Do not use your thumb, which has a faint pulse of its own.

Your instructor will tell you how to determine your resting heart rate at home and will use it and your predicted maximum heart rate (220 minus your age) to help you determine your working heart rate (WHR) zone.

In every class, you will take a

  • pre-class heart rate at the beginning of class (6 seconds)
  • working heart rate after each aerobic dance (6 seconds)
  • recovery heart rate five minutes after the last aerobic dance (15 seconds).

The pre-class heart rate (6 seconds)

This count is taken during pre-class calf stretches. It establishes a base line for the hour’s activity. When the instructor calls “heart rates”, locate your pulse and start counting when she says “Start”. When she says “Stop” after six seconds, add a zero. Thus a count of 8 for 6 seconds becomes 80 for 60 seconds (one minute). Call out the 80 to the instructor when she asks.

The working heart rate (6 seconds)

Following the Body Sculpting Medley (during which the instructor faces the students), the Booster opens the aerobic portion of class. This first aerobic dance is called the Booster because is boosts you into your working heart rate zone. Your heart rate must stay in your WHR zone until the Cooldown for your workout to be of aerobic benefit that is, have a “training effect” on your cardiovascular system.

At the end of every aerobic dance, the instructor says, “Circle up for heart rates” and the students move immediately to walk quickly in an anti-clockwise circle and locate their pulse.

The instructor walks inside the circle but in the opposite direction – clockwise – as she counts six seconds. As soon as she says “Stop”, she continues walking quickly, listening for heart rates as she looks each student in the face.

If you have to slow your pace while counting, you should quicken it again as soon as the instructor says “Stop”. If you cannot walk and count at the same time, you should step outside the moving circle while counting and rejoin it as soon as the instructor says “Stop”.

You should continue to walk quickly anti-clockwise and only leave the circle after you have given the instructor your heart rate. The dance is finished now not when the music stops!

Now is the time to pick up your water bottle (not before, please), have a drink, and keep your legs moving until the next dance begins.

The recovery heart rate (15 seconds)

The recovery heart rate is taken during calf stretches following the Cooldown dance, approximately five minutes after the end of the last aerobic dance. It is taken for 15 seconds, and this time you do not add a zero.  If your count is over 30 (120 beats per minute) you may be asked to remain after class for a second counting to ensure that your heart rate has returned to its normal level.

Some frequently asked questions:

Q. What is a “‘good” heart rate? This is unique to every student and depends on one’s age, resting heart rate and level of activity at the time of measurement. As you become more aerobically fit and your cardiovascular system becomes more efficient, your resting heart rate may lower, though this is not always the case.

Q. Why do we take heart rates after every aerobic dance? The answer to this is in the first paragraph of this article.

Q. Why do we have to walk in a circle? Because, with the instructor moving in the opposite direction, this is the quickest and most efficient way to accomplish the task, minimizing the “down” time between dances. Our goal is sustained movement in our working heart rate zone for the duration of the aerobic segment, that is, from the Booster to the Cooldown.

Q. Why do we have to walk quickly and immediately the music stops? So your heart rate will still be the same as when you were dancing (working) that’s what we want to measure. It drops off quickly when you slow your pace or stop moving. And again, because we want to minimize the time between dances.

Q. Why do we have to keep our legs moving between dances? As above to keep in our working heart rate zone and also to keep our blood circulating and not “pooling” in our feet.

Jacki Sorensen describes Aerobic Dancing as Serious fun. We’re serious about having fun, but also serious about the safety and effectiveness of everything we do. Monitoring heart rates is an important part of caring for our students, and showing them how to care for themselves.

How aerobic dancing benefits your fitness now!

Fitness isn’t instantaneous, but you need to make a start. The biggest problem is finding something you can commit to with the discipline that gets results. Congratulations! You’ve already done that. By joining Jacki’s Aerobic Dancing, you’ve found, like thousands of others, that coming to class is a joy because Jacki’s program is FUN. That’s why some of you have been coming continuously since classes opened in Sydney in 1981. Continue reading How aerobic dancing benefits your fitness now!