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Tired of Wounds in Your Old Skin Not Healing – Try
Exercise
Jan.
22, 2006- A common complaint by senior citizens is how much longer it
takes for injuries and wounds to heal as we get older. The body’s
ability to heal even small skin wounds is one of those things that slows
as we age. A new study, however, finds that regular exercise by older
adults may speed up the wound-healing process by as much as 25 percent.
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“This is the first time we’ve been able to document
this kind of enhancement associated with exercise,” said Charles Emery,
a professor of psychology and the lead author of the Ohio State
University study.
Certainly, a major reason to work for faster wound
heals is that it reduces the risk of infection.
The study included 28 healthy older adults ranging
in age from 55 to 77 (average age was 61). The participants hadn’t
exercised regularly for at least six months prior to the study. For the
research, about half (13) of them exercised three times a week for three
months. The other 15 participants served as controls and were asked not
to change their physical activity habits during the study period.
Each subject received a small puncture wound on the
back of the upper arm. Adults in the exercise group started working out
about a month before the wound procedure; this gave their bodies enough
time to adapt to a regular exercise program.
The wounds were about 1/8-inch across and deep. The
researchers photographed the wounds three times a week until the wounds
were no longer visible (about six to seven weeks).
The exercise sessions began with 10 minutes of
warm-up floor exercises and stretching followed by 30 minutes of
pedaling on a stationary bike. After that, participants either jogged or
walked briskly on a treadmill for 15 minutes, followed by about 15
minutes of strength training. All sessions ended with five minutes of
cool-down exercises.
Each participant completed assessments of exercise
endurance and stress at the beginning and end of the study. The exercise
endurance test, completed on a treadmill, measured each subject’s
aerobic fitness level by measuring how much oxygen he or she consumed
while working out.
The researchers also collected saliva samples from
each participant in order to measure levels of cortisol, a primary
stress hormone. High cortisol levels indicate that the body is under
stress; prior studies have suggested that exercise is associated with
lower levels cortisol.
Lastly, each subject completed a questionnaire
called the Perceived Stress Scale. This scale let the researchers
determine how stressful the respondents perceived their lives to be.
At the end of the study, the researchers found that
skin wounds healed an average of 10 days faster in the people who
exercised (29 days in the exercise group vs. 39 days in the non-exercise
group.)
Not surprisingly, exercise endurance increased in
the group that worked out, but remained the same in the non-exercise
group.
The researchers were somewhat surprised to find a
sharp increase in cortisol levels in the exercise group. The hormone is
typically boosted by stress, and other studies have suggested that
exercise may lower levels of stress.
“The stress of exercise may enhance the regulation
of cortisol,” Emery said. “This increase in cortisol levels may
represent a biological pathway by which exercise helps wounds heal.”
There were no changes in perceived stress in either
group but none of the adults in this study reported any significant
distress in their lives at the beginning of the study.
The current study supports the results of a related
study on wound healing conducted at Ohio State a few years ago. That
work compared wound-healing rates between older adults caring for a
loved one with Alzheimer’s disease to rates of older adults who weren’t
caregivers.
The healing rates of those who weren’t caregivers
was similar to the healing rates of the non-exercisers in the current
studying – wounds in both groups healed in about 40 days. Wounds among
older caregivers took about 20 percent longer to completely heal.
“The findings from both studies indicate that the
effect of exercise we found in the current study truly represents an
enhanced rate of wound healing in older adults,” Emery said.
The next step is to determine if older adults who
report a fair amount of stress in their lives – such as dealing with the
death of a spouse or financial troubles – get the same kind of benefit
from exercise.
The results of this study appear in a recent issue
of the Journal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences.
Emery conducted this study with Ohio State
colleagues Janice Kiecolt-Glaser, professor of psychiatry and
psychology; Ronald Glaser, director of both the Center for Stress and
Wound Healing and the Institute for Behavioral Medicine Research;
William Malarkey, associate director of the Center for Stress and Wound
Healing; and David Frid, who is currently with Pfizer, Inc.
Support for this work came from several
organizations within the National Institutes of Health: the National
Heart, Lung and Blood Institute; the National Institute on Aging; the
National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research; the National
Cancer Institute; and the National Center for Research Resources.
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