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The quick and the dead

The Retirenet

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How fast you move may help determine how long you live.



The term “the quick and the dead”—the difference between those still on the earth and those who have left—may derive from the sixteenth century Book of Common Prayer. Its sentiments still holds true.

Humans have evolved to walk. We walk across mountains, deserts, high plains and shopping malls. And the faster we walk, the longer we appear to survive.

How fast does it take to outpace the grim reaper? Australian researchers have a number—3 miles per hour. And they have the data.

But moving affects more than survival. It also affects the brain—and how well it works.

From Australia to France to Boston to…

There’s a lot of data there that physical activity is useful to your health. The main issue is how useful:

In Australian, 1700 older men were studied with stopwatches—how fast did they walk over a distance of 20 feet? The faster they went, the less they died - on five year followup.

In France, a study done in Dijon pooled data on thousands of men and women over 65. The quickest third died of cardiovascular disease at only one third the rate of the bottom quartile.

A pooled international study of 34,000 post 65 year olds—published in JAMA in 2009 showed an increased survival—the faster people moved—across the board.

Now, a study just reported at the Academy of Neurology looked at 2400 men and women, average age 62, followed for 11 years. Superior grip strength predicted less stroke. Faster walking meant less dementia.

The faster you move, the longer you last—and the better your brain. But is this cause or effect?

Markers and Predictors

Speed of ambulation in some ways can act as a pretty good marker of overall health. Sick people can’t move fast. People who eventually get sick may also not move so fast—even if at the time of study they appear asymptomatic. So there’s no immediate proof that moving faster by itself will cause better health outcomes.

But there are reasons to believe it might.

Exercise, Heart and Brain

Use it or lose it seems to be a pretty good guideline in terms of cardiovascular disease—still the largest killer worldwide, though cancer is nipping at its heels. Athletes don’t die that much from heart disease. People who walk a lot have less heart attacks and strokes.

People who walk even twenty minutes a day grow new brain cells—though most of the growth occurs in sleep.

Estimates are that exercise of most any type increases life span. Some estimates are that exercise alone can increase natural lifespans 6-7 years. Compare that with 2-3 years brought on by using “superior” medical care.

The Mechanism

What happens when you walk? A lot.

You use a lot of muscle. You use a lot of brain power. You see a lot of different things—and novelty is good for the brain.

That means massively increased information flow into your body—most of it unconscious. All that information coming in can make yours systems work better and more efficiently, including:

  • Faster recycling—cells get more efficient at remaking themselves by moving.
  • Converting white fat to brown fat—changing what is sometimes a nasty endocrine gland into a source of rapid energy use, with potentially useful effects on insulin and weight.
  • Greater coordination between breathing and circulation.

How Fast is Fast Enough?

It may not matter how fast you move as long as:

  • You’re moving and
  • You’re trying to move as quickly as you comfortably can.

Most Americans don’t move much. The vast majority of us spend a lot of time sitting. The more we sit, the faster we die.

And when we do move? Many of us will not walk very quickly. In part, that’s because everyone has their own speed. Old folks move a lot slower than young folks—ask any grandparent. Most of us slow with age—though the big fall off may not occur until we’re well past sixty.

And when walking with others, we usually adjust to the natural pace of the people we’re walking with. We are social animals, after all.

But though each of us will have our own pace, we often have many opportunities to move. We can pace back and forth on a telephone call. We can walk to kitchen and garage and living room—at whatever speed we want.

We can go from the car to the office, or the train to the workplace, or the parking lot to the sports stadium, at pretty much any pace—unless there’s a crowd around us. And there’s usually nobody around who says we can’t walk more quickly.

So forget about those old signs—walk, don’t run. It’s okay to run some times. Or just take a brisk walk. It feels good. It may even temporarily outpace the grim reaper.

Dr. Matthew Edlund, M.D., M.O.H., is an internationally recognized expert on rest, sleep, and body clocks. His books include The Body Clock Advantage, Designed to Last, and Psychological Time and Mental Illness. His new book, The Power of Rest, shows that rest is a skill that rebuilds, renews, and rewires mind and body, and can increase productivity, health, and pleasure. For more information, visit his website, TheRestDoctor.com. You can also subscribe to his new Fitcast via the iTunes Store.

 
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