Promoting resilience in the face of ageing and disease: The central role of exercise and physical activity

Ageing Res Rev. 2023 Jul:88:101940. doi: 10.1016/j.arr.2023.101940. Epub 2023 Apr 29.

Abstract

Exercise and physical activity offer clinical benefits across a wide range of both physical and neuropsychological diseases and disabilities in older adults, including syndromes for which pharmacological treatment is either absent or hazardous. However, exercise is vastly under-utilised and rarely fully integrated into aged care and geriatric medicine practice. It is still absent from the core training of most geriatricians and other healthcare professionals, and myths about risks of robust exercise abound. Insufficient physical activity and sedentariness are in fact the lethal conditions. Frailty is not a barrier to exercise, but rather one of the most important reasons to prescribe it. Like any other medical treatment, to prescribe exercise as a drug will require a full understanding of its benefits, dose-response characteristics, modality-specific adaptations, potential risks, and interactions with other treatments. Additionally, exercise prescription should be a mandatory component of training for all healthcare professionals in geriatric medicine and gerontology. This personal view asserts the importance of medication management closely integrated with physical exercise prescription, as well as nutritional support as cornerstone of a coherent and holistic approach to treating both fit and frail older adults. This includes identification and management of drug-exercise interactions, in the same way that we seek out and manage drug-drug interactions and drug-nutrient interactions. Our oldest patients deserve the dignity of our urgent resolve to remember the mission of medicine: the assertion and the assurance of the human potential. Exercise medicine is core to this mission.

Keywords: Dose-response; Exercise; Frailty; Healthy Aging; Physical activity; Resilience; Sarcopenia.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Aging* / physiology
  • Exercise
  • Exercise Therapy
  • Frail Elderly
  • Frailty* / therapy
  • Humans