According to Professor Martine Duclos, endocrinologist.
Muscle strength is a good marker of a person’s health, particularly their risk of mortality or developing cardiovascular diseases.
In the study cited, individuals with the lowest muscle strength had:
- a 1.7 times higher risk of dying within 10 years
- a 2.4 times higher risk of dying from cancer
- a 1.6 times higher risk of dying from cardiovascular disease
Muscle strength is a risk marker for early mortality.
You can improve it: strength training (weightlifting, gym workouts, bodyweight exercises). It’s recommended to be guided by a professional.
Muscle strength is proportional to muscle mass.
Muscles are reservoirs of amino acids from proteins.
Fat is linked to glucose and sugar metabolism.
Lack of protein is also associated with immune disorders, metabolic dysfunctions, and a decline in almost all tissue function – it’s a marker of aging.
Having good muscle mass is very important. You need to build muscle while you’re young, because it starts to decline as early as your 20s or 30s.
Increasing forearm grip strength by just 5 kg can reduce mortality by 70%.
There are even strength training protocols for people in their 80s.
Maintaining muscle is key to maintaining good health. Muscle is a health factor, and above all, a powerful preventive factor against chronic disease.
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