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Running for Exercise Mitigates Age-Related Deterioration of Walking Economy
Authors:Justus D. Ortega  Owen N. Beck  Jaclyn M. Roby  Aria L. Turney  Rodger Kram
Affiliation:1. Department of Kinesiology & Recreation Administration, Humboldt State University, Arcata, California, United States of America.; 2. Department of Integrative Physiology, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, United States of America.; Scientific Institute Foundation Santa Lucia, Italy,
Abstract:

Introduction

Impaired walking performance is a key predictor of morbidity among older adults. A distinctive characteristic of impaired walking performance among older adults is a greater metabolic cost (worse economy) compared to young adults. However, older adults who consistently run have been shown to retain a similar running economy as young runners. Unfortunately, those running studies did not measure the metabolic cost of walking. Thus, it is unclear if running exercise can prevent the deterioration of walking economy.

Purpose

To determine if and how regular walking vs. running exercise affects the economy of locomotion in older adults.

Methods

15 older adults (69±3 years) who walk ≥30 min, 3x/week for exercise, “walkers” and 15 older adults (69±5 years) who run ≥30 min, 3x/week, “runners” walked on a force-instrumented treadmill at three speeds (0.75, 1.25, and 1.75 m/s). We determined walking economy using expired gas analysis and walking mechanics via ground reaction forces during the last 2 minutes of each 5 minute trial. We compared walking economy between the two groups and to non-aerobically trained young and older adults from a prior study.

Results

Older runners had a 7–10% better walking economy than older walkers over the range of speeds tested (p = .016) and had walking economy similar to young sedentary adults over a similar range of speeds (p = .237). We found no substantial biomechanical differences between older walkers and runners. In contrast to older runners, older walkers had similar walking economy as older sedentary adults (p = .461) and ∼26% worse walking economy than young adults (p<.0001).

Conclusion

Running mitigates the age-related deterioration of walking economy whereas walking for exercise appears to have minimal effect on the age-related deterioration in walking economy.
Keywords:
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