Sports medicine (Auckland, N.Z.)

How Different Amounts of Strength Training Affect Healthy Older Adults

Updated

Abstract

Resistance training (RT) improved muscle strength substantially, with a mean effect size of 1.57 across 25 studies.

  • RT had small effects on muscle morphology, with a mean effect size of 0.42 from nine studies.
  • Significant improvements in muscle strength were observed for both upper (mean effect size of 1.61) and lower extremities (mean effect size of 1.76).
  • Key training variables, including training period and intensity, significantly influenced muscle strength outcomes.
  • The largest effect sizes were associated with training periods of 50-53 weeks and intensities of 70-79% of the one-repetition maximum (1RM).
  • For muscle strength, a training frequency of two sessions per week and a volume of two to three sets per exercise were most effective.
  • Findings regarding muscle morphology are preliminary due to the limited number of studies.

Simplified

Key numbers

1.57
Increase in Muscle Strength
Weighted mean across 25 studies
50–53 weeks
Optimal Training Period
Mean = 2.34 for this training period
70–79% of 1RM
Effective Training Intensity
Mean = 1.89 for this intensity range

Full Text

What this is

  • This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluates the effects of resistance training (RT) on muscle strength and morphology in healthy older adults.
  • It synthesizes data from 25 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) to establish dose-response relationships for various RT parameters.
  • Key findings include significant improvements in muscle strength and limited effects on muscle morphology, with specific training variables influencing outcomes.

Essence

  • Resistance training significantly improves muscle strength in healthy older adults but has smaller effects on muscle morphology. Training period, intensity, and time under tension are crucial for maximizing strength gains.

Key takeaways

  • Resistance training led to a large increase in muscle strength (mean = 1.57) across 25 studies. This indicates a substantial benefit for older adults engaging in such training.
  • Training variables significantly affect outcomes, with a training period of 50–53 weeks yielding the largest strength gains (mean = 2.34). This emphasizes the importance of duration in training programs.
  • The optimal training intensity for strength gains is 70–79% of the one-repetition maximum (1RM), which produced a mean of 1.89. This finding guides practitioners in designing effective resistance training protocols.

Caveats

  • The methodological quality of the included studies was low, with a mean PEDro score of 4.6, which may affect the reliability of the findings.
  • Only nine studies examined muscle morphology, leading to preliminary conclusions about the effects of RT on this outcome, indicating a need for further research.
  • High heterogeneity among studies (I² = 80%) suggests variability in responses to resistance training, which may limit the generalizability of the results.

Definitions

  • Standardized Mean Difference (SMD): A statistical measure used to compare the effect size of an intervention across different studies, indicating the magnitude of change.

Simplified

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