
Science Reveals Why Exercise Takes Longer to Pay Off as You Get Older
Dr. Joseph Mercola - Take Control of Your Health · Dr. Joseph Mercola
September 12, 20257m 43s
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Show Notes
- Sarcopenia, the age-related loss of muscle mass and strength, begins subtly in midlife and accelerates with age, increasing your risk of frailty, falls, and fractures
- As your body ages, muscles become less responsive to training, and physical gains come more slowly, even when effort and consistency remain the same
- A 2025 study published in Nature Communications found that older muscles fail to activate key growth pathways and repair signals after exercise, explaining the reduced adaptation
- Despite slower gains, exercise remains essential not just for physical strength but also for brain function, heart health, immune regulation, and metabolic resilience across the aging process
- Longevity benefits peak at around 40 to 60 minutes of strength training per week; exceeding this reverses the gains and increases the risk of overtraining