The study looked at three decades’ worth of data from nearly 150,000 adults participating in three long-running studies—the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study, the Nurses’ Health Study, and the Nurses’ Health Study II. Researchers tracked participants’ weekly resistance training and aerobic exercise duration via periodic questionnaires.
Adults who averaged 90 and 120 minutes of weekly resistance training—activities such as pushups, squats, lunges, or weightlifting—had a 13% lower risk of early death from any cause, a 19% lower risk from heart disease, and a 27% lower risk from neurological diseases like Alzheimer’s, compared with those who did no strength training. Doing strength training more than 120 minutes a week did not appear to provide any additional benefit, the study found.
The study also found that participants who did both strength and aerobic training, such as walking, running, swimming, cycling, or tennis, had among the lowest mortality risks in the study—up to 45% lower risk than those who didn’t do either kind of training.
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