‘Exercise may be the most potent longevity intervention that we have.
It turns out that peak aerobic cardiorespiratory fitness, measured in terms of VO2 max, is perhaps the single most powerful marker for longevity (VO2 max represents the maximum rate at which a person can utilize oxygen).
There’s a strong association between cardiorespiratory fitness and longevity….and it might surprise you to learn that muscle may be almost as powerfully correlated with living longer.
The book Outlive: The Science & Art of Longevity written by Peter Attia and Bill Gifford took the world by storm, and for good reason! One of the focuses in the book is the centenarian decathlon, a framework that Attia uses to organize his patients’ physical aspirations for the later decades of their lives, especially their Marginal Decade.
What is the centenarian decathlon? Here’s how it’s described in Outlive:
“Of all Olympic athletes, the decathletes are most revered. The male and female winners of the gold medal are declared the ‘World’s Greatest Athletes.’ Yet they are not the best at any of the ten individual events in which they compete; they likely would not even medal. But they are still considered the greatest because they are remarkably good at so many different events. They are true generalists—yet they train like specialists.
Each of us needs to be training for the Centenarian Decathlon. What in the world is the Centenarian Decathlon?
I’m not talking about an actual competition among hundred-year-olds, although similar events do already exist: the National Senior Games, held every other year, brings together remarkable older athletes, some of them in their nineties and beyond. The record for the hundred-meter dash for women ages one hundred and up is about forty-one seconds.
The Centenarian Decathlon is a framework I use to organize my patients’ physical aspirations for the later decades of their lives, especially their Marginal Decade. I know, it’s a somewhat morbid topic, thinking about our own physical decline. But not thinking about it won’t make it any less inevitable.
Think of the Centenarian Decathlon as the ten most important physical tasks you will want to be able to do for the rest of your life. Some of the items on the list resemble actual athletic events, while some are closer to activities of daily living, and still others might reflect your own personal interests. I find it useful because it helps us visualize, with great precision, exactly what kind of fitness we need to build and maintain as we get older. It creates a template for our training.
I start by presenting my patients with a long list of physical tasks that might include some of the following:
• Hike 1.5 miles on a hilly trail.
• Get up off the floor under your own power, using a maximum of one arm for support.
• Pick up a young child from the floor.
• Carry two five-pound bags of groceries for five blocks.
• Lift a twenty-pound suitcase into the overhead compartment of a plane.
• Balance on one leg for thirty seconds, eyes open. (Bonus points: eyes closed, fifteen seconds.)
• Have sex.
• Climb four flights of stairs in three minutes.
• Open a jar.
• Do thirty consecutive jump-rope skips.“