Exercise helps speed
wound healing in older adults
Newswise — The body’s ability to
heal even small skin wounds normally slows down as we age.
But a new study in older adults finds that regular exercise
may speed up the wound-healing process by as much as 25
percent.
“This is the first time
we’ve been able to document this kind of enhancement
associated with exercise,” said Charles Emery, a professor
of psychology and the lead author of the Ohio State
University study.
The faster that a wound
heals, the less chance it will become infected.
The results appear in a
recent issue of the Journal of Gerontology: Medical
Sciences.
The study included 28
healthy older adults ranging in age from 55 to 77 (average
age was 61). The participants hadn’t exercised regularly for
at least six months prior to the study. For the research,
about half (13) of them exercised three times a week for
three months. The other 15 participants served as controls
and were asked not to change their physical activity habits
during the study period.
Each subject received a
small puncture wound on the back of the upper arm. Adults in
the exercise group started working out about a month before
the wound procedure; this gave their bodies enough time to
adapt to a regular exercise program.
The wounds were about
1/8-inch across and deep. The researchers photographed the
wounds three times a week until the wounds were no longer
visible (about six to seven weeks).
The exercise sessions
began with 10 minutes of warm-up floor exercises and
stretching followed by 30 minutes of pedaling on a
stationary bike. After that, participants either jogged or
walked briskly on a treadmill for 15 minutes, followed by
about 15 minutes of strength training. All sessions ended
with five minutes of cool-down exercises.
Each participant completed
assessments of exercise endurance and stress at the
beginning and end of the study. The exercise endurance test,
completed on a treadmill, measured each subject’s aerobic
fitness level by measuring how much oxygen he or she
consumed while working out.
The researchers also
collected saliva samples from each participant in order to
measure levels of cortisol, a primary stress hormone. High
cortisol levels indicate that the body is under stress;
prior studies have suggested that exercise is associated
with lower levels cortisol.
Lastly, each subject
completed a questionnaire called the Perceived Stress Scale.
This scale let the researchers determine how stressful the
respondents perceived their lives to be.
At the end of the study,
the researchers found that skin wounds healed an average of
10 days faster in the people who exercised (29 days in the
exercise group vs. 39 days in the non-exercise group.)
Not surprisingly, exercise
endurance increased in the group that worked out, but
remained the same in the non-exercise group.
The researchers were
somewhat surprised to find a sharp increase in cortisol
levels in the exercise group. The hormone is typically
boosted by stress, and other studies have suggested that
exercise may lower levels of stress.
“The stress of exercise
may enhance the regulation of cortisol,” Emery said. “This
increase in cortisol levels may represent a biological
pathway by which exercise helps wounds heal.”
There were no changes in
perceived stress in either group but none of the adults in
this study reported any significant distress in their lives
at the beginning of the study.
The current study supports
the results of a related study on wound healing conducted at
Ohio State a few years ago. That work compared wound-healing
rates between older adults caring for a loved one with
Alzheimer’s disease to rates of older adults who weren’t
caregivers.
The healing rates of those
who weren’t caregivers was similar to the healing rates of
the non-exercisers in the current studying – wounds in both
groups healed in about 40 days. Wounds among older
caregivers took about 20 percent longer to completely heal.
“The findings from both
studies indicate that the effect of exercise we found in the
current study truly represents an enhanced rate of wound
healing in older adults,” Emery said.
The next step is to
determine if older adults who report a fair amount of stress
in their lives – such as dealing with the death of a spouse
or financial troubles – get the same kind of benefit from
exercise.
Emery conducted this study
with Ohio State colleagues Janice Kiecolt-Glaser, professor
of psychiatry and psychology; Ronald Glaser, director of
both the Center for Stress and Wound Healing and the
Institute for Behavioral Medicine Research; William
Malarkey, associate director of the Center for Stress and
Wound Healing; and David Frid, who is currently with Pfizer,
Inc.
Support for this work came
from several organizations within the National Institutes of
Health: the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute; the
National Institute on Aging; the National Institute of
Dental and Craniofacial Research; the National Cancer
Institute; and the National Center for Research Resources.