Good Joints Seen As Key Link In Healthy Aging

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(NAPSA)—Exercise has been identified as a key component of aging gracefully, and has been linked with not only improved physical health but also better cognitive performance. The maintenance of fully functioning joints is an important part of enabling active seniors to participate in health-promoting athletic activity, experts agree. Seniors today are working longer, traveling more and anticipate remaining active longer into life than their predecessors did. With more than 14 percent of the U.S. population at least 65 years old, it’s no surprise that a Google search on “healthy aging” yields more than 18 million results. The National Institutes of Health, a national body that funds research and sets policy, has this to say about exercise for older people: “Being physically active can also help you stay strong and fit enough to keep doing the things you like to do as you get older. Making exercise and physical activity a regular part of yourlife can improve your health and help you maintain your independence as you age.” Losing the ability to exercise can have grave consequences, the NIH warns. “Lack of physical activity also can lead to more visits to the doctor, more hospitalizations, and more use of medicines for a variety of illnesses,” the NIH said. Exercise can prevent or delay disease, help to manage stress and improve mood, and can help support a healthy and intellectually vibrant old age. Recent research from Finland involving more than 5,000 subjects suggests that participating in leisure time physical activity earlier in life promotes mobility in old age. Another smaller-scale study suggests that resistance training, which would naturally tend to place more stress on the joints, helps support healthy cognition among older adults better than do more gentle activities. Given that today’s Exercise can prevent disease, manage stress and help support healthy aging. seniors are staying active longer, and understand very well that mobility is linked to retaining independence, it’s not a surprise that joint health is consistently one of the top selling categories of dietary supplements, with glucosamine and chondroitin combinations leading the pack. Glucosamine, an amino acid that the body produces naturally, is part of the process to form and repair cartilage. It is thought that consuming glucosamine, which is usually made from shrimp shells, may increase new cartilage formation by providing the necessary building blocks. The usual dose is 1,000 mg each day for one to two months. Studies on the effectiveness of glucosamine are inconclusive at this point. The science on chondroitin is more encouraging, however, if it is taken in the right amounts. Chondroitin, a nutrient extracted from cow, pork or bird cartilage, is one of the main substances responsible for cartilage resiliency, and also plays a major role in blocking the reactions that break downcartilage over time. In January 2015, the Cochrane Collaboration Review on “Chondroitin for Osteoarthritis” reviewed 43 randomized controlled trials involving over 9,000 people. It found that chondroitin, alone or in combination with glucosamine, was better than placebo in improving pain in participants with osteoarthritis and “there was statistically significant less reduc- tion in minimal joint space width with chondroitin compared to placebo groups.” Other large-scale studies have also had fairly positive results. Not all supplements are created equal, however. The Food and Drug Administration regulates dietary supplements according to safety, and removes potentially harmful products from the market. But the FDA does not assess the health benefits of supplements as it does for drugs, making it incumbent on consumers to educate themselves on dosage levels and ingredient quality issues to find supplements that give the best results. With chondroitin supplements, for example, the benefit appears to be linked to dose and ingredient quality. Dr. Nicola Volpi of University of Modena, Italy noted that chondroitin quality affects therapeutic utility. Results may vary according to the grade of chondroitin used as well as serving size; underdosing is thought to negatively affect outcomes. Most clinical studies that support chondroitin efficacy used daily serving sizes ranging between 800mg and 1,200mg. Jana Hildreth, a noted expert on chondroitin purity and director of scientific affairs for Synutra Pure, Ltd., said “chondroitin is an expensive ingredient, so some companies add less to reduce cost. It’s important to take that into account when shopping for a chondroitin supplement.” Synutra Pure offers tips for selecting quality supplements at www.synutrapure.com. Chondroitin is widely prescribed as a slow-acting drug to treat osteoarthritis in European Union countries. For these products, the purity level is set at 95 percent and the dosage is usually pegged at 1,000mg. In the U.S. market, where chondroitin is sold as a dietary supplement, USP, a national certifying body, has set the purity standard at 90 percent.