Why High-Impact Exercise Is Good for Your Bones
By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS
Illustration by Ben Wiseman
This article appeared in the March 9, 2014 issue of The New York Times Magazine.
Bones should be jarred, for their own good.
Past experiments have definitively established that subjecting bones to
abrupt stress prompts them to add mass or at least reduces their loss of
mass as people age. What has been in dispute, however, is how much
force is needed to stimulate bone — and how to apply that force in daily
life.
Recently researchers at the University of Bristol
gathered male and female adolescents — the body accumulates bone mass
rapidly at this time of life — and had them go about their daily
routines while they wore activity monitors. The bone density of the
volunteers’ hips was also measured.
A week later, the scientists reclaimed the
monitors to check each teenager’s exposure to G forces, a measure of
impact. Those who experienced impacts of 4.2 G’s or greater — though
these were infrequent — had notably sturdier hipbones. Additional work
done by the same researchers showed that running a 10-minute mile or
jumping up onto and down from a box at least 15 inches high was needed
to produce forces that great. The significance of these findings is that
people should probably run pretty fast or jump high to generate forces
great enough to help build bone.
Unfortunately, few older adults are likely to
be doing so. In follow-up experiments, the same researchers equipped 20
women older than 60 with activity monitors and ran them through an
aerobics class, several brief and increasingly brisk walks and a session
of stepping onto and off a foot-high box. None of the women reached the
4-G threshold — none, in fact, generated more than 2.1 G’s of force at
any point during the various exercises.
The implications are somewhat concerning. Dr.
Jon Tobias, a professor of rheumatology at the University of Bristol
who led the experiments, says that while impacts that produce fewer than
4 G’s of force may help adults maintain bone mass — a possibility that
he and his colleagues are exploring in ongoing experiments — it’s
unclear what level of force below 4 G’s is needed.
So, Dr. Tobias says, young people and healthy
adults should probably pound the ground, at least sometimes. Sprint.
Jump off a box 15 inches or higher at your gym and jump back up. Hop in
place. A study by other researchers
published in January found that women between 25 and 50 who hopped at
least 10 times twice a day, with 30 seconds between each hop,
significantly increased their hipbone density after four months. Another
group of subjects, who hopped 20 times daily, showed even greater
gains.
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