HomeNewsHealth & FitnessStudy finds endurance, not resistance training, has anti-ageing effects

Study finds endurance, not resistance training, has anti-ageing effects

Researchers from Leipzig University in Germany found that endurance and high intensity training both slowed or even reversed cellular ageing, but that resistance training did not.

November 28, 2018 / 16:35 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

Endurance exercise, such as running, swimming, cross-country skiing and cycling, will help you age better than resistance exercise, which involves strength training with weights, a study has found.

The study, published in the European Heart Journal, looked at the effects of three types of exercise -- endurance training, high intensity interval training and resistance training -- on the way cells in the human body age.

Story continues below Advertisement

Researchers from Leipzig University in Germany found that endurance and high intensity training both slowed or even reversed cellular ageing, but that resistance training did not.

Our DNA is organised into chromosomes in all the cells in our bodies. At the end of each chromosome is a repetitive DNA sequence, called a telomere, that caps the chromosome and protects its ends from deteriorating.