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The Simple Workout That Doctors Wish More Women Over 40 Were Doing for Stronger Bones

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The Simple Workout That Doctors Wish More Women Over 40 Were Doing for Stronger Bones

THREE YEARS AGO, at 52, Tina Tang could deadlift 310 pounds without blinking and squat 210 like it was part of her warm-up. She had discovered powerlifting in her early 40s, and by all appearances, she was the picture of strength.

So when her annual physical revealed osteopenia—low bone density—she was stunned.

As a coach who trains women over 40, Tang believed she was doing everything right for her bones: lifting heavy, paying close attention to her form, eating enough protein to support muscle maintenance and growth. But one critical piece of the bone-health puzzle was missing from her routine, she would come to figure out: plyometrics.

Many women, particularly those over 40, have been told (or assume) that jumping is off-limits as they age. “The misconception is fueled by claims of increased joint pain, pelvic floor leakage, and the idea that bones become too fragile to tolerate impact,” says board-certified orthopedic surgeon, Pamela Mehta, MD, founder of Resilience Orthopedics in Los Gatos, California.

The truth: For most otherwise healthy women, plyometrics—and jumping and weight-bearing impact exercises more broadly—are among the most effective ways to protect bone health long term, says Dr. Mehta. And beyond just helping prevent bone loss, plyometric training can actually help reverse declines, emerging data suggests.

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A recent review published in Current Osteoporosis Reports found plyometrics are among the most effective tools for improving bone density and reducing fracture risk in post-menopausal women. Meanwhile, a 2025 review in BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders found that when already-active people added plyometrics to their routine, they saw promising improvements in bone mineral density at the spine and hip.

Tang is living proof of these findings. At 54 years old, and just two years after adding plyometrics to her workout routine, Tang got a follow-up DEXA scan (the gold-standard test for assessing bone density) that revealed measurable improvements, including in her right hip, the area that had taken the biggest hit, per her initial scan.

“The trend is for women to continuously lose more and more bone as they age,” says Tang. Once you develop osteoporosis or osteopenia, only a small percentage of people can regain density. “So the fact that I improved mine—and plyometrics was the main thing I changed—is major,” she says.

So even though plyometrics may have gotten a bad rap among the 40-plus crowd, that reputation is rooted in nothing more than outdated pseudoscience and fear-mongering. These explosive, higher-impact exercises deliver the exact type of loading that spurs bone growth, development, and increased density.

In sum, stronger bones, better balance, faster reaction time, and a body that’s more resilient as you age are just a skip, hop, and (broad) jump away. Here’s what to know—and what to do.

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The Bone-Building Power of Plyometrics

“Plyometrics are a category of exercises that require you to produce a tremendous amount of force in a short amount of time,” says strength and conditioning specialist Alena Luciani, MS, CSCS, founder of Training2xl. Often described as explosive or powerful, plyometrics are more impactful than traditional weight-bearing or high-impact exercises by design.

Consider traditional squats versus plyometric variations. Sure, goblet squats—which involve holding a weight in the front rack position as you sit to depth—can support bone density by challenging the musculoskeletal system, explains Luciani. But their higher-impact cousin, the jump squat, takes the stimulus to the next level. “You have to move faster and produce force much more quickly than you would during a goblet squat,” she says.

That rapid, high-impact loading is the exact type of stimulus that bones need to remodel and grow stronger, says Parini A. Patel, DO, an interventional pain and musculoskeletal medicine physician at Atlantic Health in New Jersey. In fact, recent research suggests that high(er) impact, more explosive training regimes (like plyometrics) provide even more bone benefits than traditional strength training.

One 2023 review published in the Journal of Sports Sciences observed that high-impact jumping exercise improved bone mineral density more than non-jumping alternatives.

Bones respond best when forces hit them quickly and sharply—like the impact of landing from a jump, explains Dr. Patel. “Plyometrics naturally provide these conditions in ways that low-impact activities cannot,” says Dr. Patel. Each time you land, sensor cells in the bones (called osteocytes) detect that burst of impact and signal the bone’s builder cells (osteoblasts) to lay down new bone, she explains. Over time, even short doses of this kind of impact can significantly improve bone strength.

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Just as important as their impact on bone density, plyometrics also strengthen the systems that help prevent fractures in the first place. “Plyometrics also train and prime your central nervous system, helping to increase reaction time,” says Luciani. “Fast reaction time is significant for adults as they get older because it can be the difference between tripping, falling, and breaking a hip while walking on the sidewalk, and catching yourself so that the break never happens,” she says. This is key as hip fractures have been shown to increase the risk of future fractures drastically and are associated with higher mortality rates—especially in older women.

Why Women Have the Most to Gain From Plyo Training

While plyo training has benefits for people across the gender spectrum, women are especially poised to reap the benefits. Women face significantly higher lifetime risks of osteopenia and osteoporosis by a large margin. (Eighty percent of all people with osteoporosis are women, studies suggest.)

One cause of this discrepancy? Hormones, says Dr. Mehta. Estrogen in particular has a protective impact on the bones; while the hormone is best known for its role in reproduction, estrogen supports new bone formation.

Unfortunately, that means that when estrogen levels drop during perimenopause and the menopause transition, the protective impact wanes and women start to lose bone mass—and quickly, says Dr. Mehta. (Men experience hormonal changes with age, too, but the effect of reduced testosterone levels on bone is far less dramatic.)

“Women also reach a lower peak bone mass in early adulthood compared to men, providing less skeletal reserve as age-related bone loss begins,” says Dr. Patel. In addition, women have smaller frames than men, and therefore are predisposed to have smaller bones, thinner cortices, and lower bone volume than men, she adds. With that, the natural declines associated with age and hormonal changes have more detrimental impacts on women over time.

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Not to mention, because women live five to six years longer than men on average, “they spend more years in a lowest estrogen state,” she says, which means the internal structure of the bones gradually weakens over time, raising the risk of fractures.

Women’s comparatively heightened risk for osteopenia and osteoporosis, broadly speaking, makes them ideal candidates for nearly any kind of bone-protective interventions. But plyometrics may be an especially powerful addition.

Consider this: The spine is the most common osteoporotic fracture site amongst women, while the hip is a close second. Breaks in either area can cause pain, as well as lead to immobility and loss of independence, which leads to other complications long-term. The good news is that both regions are highly responsive to plyometric training. “The hips and spine respond especially well because they absorb the most force when you land,” Dr. Patel says.

Importantly, health care providers emphasize that plyometrics aren’t meant to replace traditional strength training, but to complement it. Strength training supports muscle and tissue health more broadly, while plyometrics deliver the impact bones respond to particularly well, explains Dr. Patel. Together, the two types of loading work together to support the health of your entire frame—and research backs it up.

A study published in Applied Sciences last year found that participants who tacked on twice-weekly jump training to their usual exercise routine had improved lower-limb joint health in just 12 weeks. Meanwhile, a 2025 review in Current Osteoporosis Reports found that high-impact plyometric exercise increased lumbar spine bone mineral density in post-menopausal women. But, the authors note that the greatest benefits often appear in programs that combine resistance training with impact loading, reinforcing the idea that the two approaches work best together.

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And those widespread myths that say plyometrics are off-limits after middle age? Hogwash. “Jumping does not cause wear-and-tear, worsen osteoarthritis, or increase fracture risk,” says Dr. Patel. “When done appropriately, plyometric drills are one of the most effective ways to stimulate bone formation and preserve bone density during midlife,” she says. The real risk arises from improper progression, inadequate landing mechanics, or unrecognized musculoskeletal conditions—not the jumping itself, she says.

How to Integrate Plyometrics into Your Routine in a Realistic Way

No matter your age, goals, or training background, it’s wise to consult a physician before giving your movement practice a major overhaul, says Dr. Patel. A clinician can review your medical history, medications, bone density status, and any underlying conditions to determine whether impact training is appropriate for you at this time. Or, if you’ll need modifications.

“Jumping does not cause wear-and-tear, worsen osteoarthritis, or increase fracture risk.” —Dr. Parini A. Patel

If you have symptoms of pelvic floor dysfunction (e.g., urinary leakage, heaviness or pressure in the pelvis, pain during penetration, or discomfort during high-impact activities) it’s worth consulting a pelvic floor physical therapist first. Conditions like prolapse or incontinence often require some pelvic floor strengthening and coordination work before plyometrics feel safe and supportive, Dr. Patel says.

Once you’ve gotten the green light, the next step is to gradually introduce plyometrics into your workouts. For most, Luciani recommends picking just one or two plyometric movements per session, performing 8 to 12 total reps of each movement, with a minimum of 20 to 30 seconds between reps.

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Perform these movements after your warm-up, but before your main strength work, when your nervous system is primed but still fresh enough to generate power safely.

That may not sound like much, but it’s the ideal dose. “You want to keep the volume really low because these movements are incredibly taxing on your tissues and nervous system,” she says. “The goal is quality, not quantity.” A smaller number of well-executed reps is far more effective (and safer!) than dozens of sloppy reps.

Workout Rx: Pick just one or two plyometric movements per session, performing 8–12 total reps of each movement, with a minimum of 20–30 seconds between reps.

1. Prep your body. Your current strength, balance, bone density, and overall fitness level should dictate exactly which plyometrics you introduce first. But Dr. Patel recommends beginning with movements that build Achilles tendon strength and lower-leg resilience, since the Achilles absorbs a large portion of the force when you land from a jump. Calf raises, heel drops, and small pogo hops can all help prep the tissues and joints for higher-impact training, she says.

As you hop, make sure to prioritize two-foot takeoffs and proper landing mechanics (soft knees, send back hips, engaged core), says Dr. Patel. This will help distribute impact throughout the lower body and reduce undue stress on your joints, all while still delivering the bone-building stimulus that plyometrics are known for, she explains.

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Stay here for a minimum of two to three weeks, or as long as it takes for the hops to feel smooth and you to feel confident.

2. Level up to staggered-stance jumps. When you feel stable and controlled with two-foot hops, Tang recommends graduating to staggered-stance jumps. “Start with one foot just slightly in front—the change in stance forces your body to find its center of mass differently,” she explains. The mid-line strength and increased balance you gain here will make later progressions—like broad jumps and single-leg hops—much more accessible and safer. Just don’t forget to practice with both your dominant and non-dominant foot forward, as you want to build balanced strength and stability, she says.

3. Add more explosive options. After a few weeks of symptom-free, beginner-friendly plyometrics, you’re ready to try advanced plyometric exercises, such as:

  • Broad jump
  • Burpee broad jump
  • Tuck jump
  • Depth jump

These all require you to generate even more force even more quickly, which is precisely what makes them so effective for bone health—but also why they need to be approached thoughtfully, says Luciani.

5. Try unilateral plyometrics. “One of the hardest next levels is single-leg hopping,” says Tang. Unilateral plyometrics demand significantly more balance, stability, and force production from each leg—which is exactly why they’re so effective, she says. “Try hopping on a single leg in place, hopping forward, hopping left and right.” As you gain proficiency in these one-sided movements, try increasing the distance you cover with each hop,” she suggests.

6. Don’t forget about midline and upper-body plyometrics. Lower-body plyometrics may get all the attention, but if you want stronger bones or midline, you shouldn’t snooze on upper-body variations. “Upper-body plyometrics are fun to do, dynamic, great for stress relief, and often utilize a medicine ball,” says Luciani. These exercises—which include med-ball throws, d-ball slams, rotational wall throws, and the like—help you turn, rotate, react, and produce power through your upper and middle body, which is a real asset as we age,” she says.

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Luciani suggests one of your two to three weekly plyometric sessions, an upper-body or midline-focused workout. Ideally, hitting them before an upper-body-focused lifting day, like shoulder and biceps or back and triceps.

7. Prioritize recovery. No matter your progression, plyometrics require a lot from your body. Yep, even though you’re only supposed to do fewer than 12 reps per session. “You want to allow 48 hours between your higher-intensity plyometric sessions for proper recovery,” says Dr. Patel. You can further support recovery by prioritizing sleep, eating nutrient-dense foods and enough of them, and implementing stress-relief exercises.

Additionally, be sure to check in with your body. “Sharp pain, new neurological symptoms, pelvic floor symptoms, and prolonged soreness are signs that it’s time to pause progression and check in with an expert,” she says.

Lettermark

Gabrielle Kassel (she/her) is a sex and wellness journalist who writes at the intersection of queerness, sexual health, and pleasure. In addition to Women’s Health, her work has appeared in publications such as Shape, Cosmopolitan, Well+Good, Health, Self, Men’s Health, Greatist, and more! In her free time, Gabrielle can be found coaching CrossFit, reviewing pleasure products, hiking with her border collie, or recording episodes of the podcast she co-hosts called  

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Power up! Could force be the secret to supercharging your fitness?

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Power up! Could force be the secret to supercharging your fitness?

Chasing after your dog, catching yourself before you fall, jumping over a big puddle. These activities all have something in common, and it’s not just that they’re the makings of a very bad day. They rely on power: the ability to generate force quickly. It’s an often overlooked part of the fitness menu that experts think deserves more attention.

Mobility, cardio and strength all help us stay active and healthy as we get older. Strength training in particular has boomed in recent years, as the importance of building muscle mass to keep us strong, protect our bones and help us stay mobile as we age becomes more widely recognised. But when it comes to activities such as pushing yourself up from a chair or moving your arms quickly to break a fall, the size of your muscles will only get you so far. You also need power.

Imagine throwing a shot put, says Oly Perkin, a researcher at the University of Bath specialising in exercise to improve health at all stages of life. “You might have the strength to move the shot put from a start position to the top position. That’s largely down to your muscle mass. But to do that super quickly, to produce the force needed to propel the shot into the air, a different kind of strength is required.”

That explosive force depends on how quickly the nervous system can activate those muscles – the speed and efficiency of the brain-muscle connection.

For younger, active people, improving power can help prevent injuries. It can also help people who lift weights break through a training plateau. Where power training may matter most, though, is in reducing some of the effects of ageing.

“As you get older your muscles shrink and that is inescapable, irrespective of how active you are,” Perkin says. “If you make sure that the neural element is maintained alongside the muscle, your ability to maintain physical function across your life is much better. Even if you inevitably lose muscle mass, there’s good evidence that you can make better use of the muscle you have.”

The challenge is that power tends to decline faster than strength. After the age of 40 people typically lose about 1-2% of muscle mass each year. Alarmingly, muscle power can decline earlier and much more rapidly. The encouraging news is that power can be trained.

You build muscle by moving heavy weights a few times a week and increasing the load as it becomes manageable. The tension that the exercise places on the muscle fibres triggers a remodelling process that leaves the muscles better able to handle the stress next time.

Power is built differently. Instead of lifting heavy weights you move lighter weights, or your own body weight, but as quickly as possible. This could mean plyometric exercises such as box jumps. It could also include weighted movements such as throwing and catching a medicine ball, weighted jumps, snatches (where you grab a dumbbell from the ground and pull it towards the ceiling) and kettle bell swings. Weight-wise, you want something at about a six-out-of-10 difficulty level.

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For older or less mobile people, power training can start with very simple movements. Try wall push-offs: lean diagonally with your hands against a wall, arms bent, and push yourself away at speed.

Perkin adds that, although everyone can benefit from training power, it may be especially valuable for older adults who have already experienced a significant decline in muscle mass. When muscle loss reaches the point of immobility, rebuilding it becomes very difficult. But improving the nervous system’s ability to activate the muscle that remains is still possible. “Growing muscle when you’re old is hard. There are physiological limits,” he says. “But for most older adults the capacity to improve neural function is still quite good. Within three or four weeks you can start to see improvements in key markers.”

If you’re thinking of stepping into your power, Perkin, alongside Alex Dinsdale, senior lecturer in sport and exercise biomechanics at Leeds Beckett University, and Leigh Breen, a leading expert in the field of skeletal muscle physiology and metabolism from the University of Leicester, share their tips.

Find your benchmark

A good way to test whether you could benefit from power training is if you can hold a squat but can’t squat jump more than a couple of inches off the ground, says Perkin. But jumps are also useful for measuring progress for those who have already built some power. Dinsdale says that when he works with athletes they regularly test power by incorporating jumps into sessions and measuring the heights or distances achieved. This may include static jumps on to boxes or broad jumps where you jump forward from a standing start.

For older or less active adults, the sit-to-stand test is useful. Sit in a chair with no armrests, cross your arms over your chest with your hands on your shoulders and keep your feet flat on the floor. How many times can you move from sitting to standing in 30 seconds? Over-65s should aim for at least 11 repetitions.

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Perkin recommends using the same exercise to improve your power by doing three sets of 12 to 15 sit-to-stands while wearing a weighted vest.

Illustration: Cat Sims/The Guardian

Train with a goal in mind

“Obviously the main goal should be good general health and longevity,” says Breen. “But beyond that, everybody has something specific they want to achieve.” It’s useful to keep that end goal in mind as a motivator, as you’re less likely to see visible results than you are with strength training. It doesn’t have to involve training for a marathon or doing a Hyrox competition. It could simply mean restoring a functional ability that has been lost, such as being able to throw the bin bags into the outside bin or chasing the grandchildren around. “I think it’s always important to keep the purpose in mind when we undertake a training regime,” says Breen.

Get the timing right

All our experts say power training should come after you’ve warmed up, but early in your workout. It’s harder to develop neuromuscular speed when your muscles are fatigued; and it’s easier to injure yourself doing rapid movements when you’re exhausted.

Keep sessions short, adds Dinsdale. The focus is on how quickly you can move something, which means working at your maximum possible speed. You can only sustain that for short bursts. If you’re using weights, choose a light or moderate load and move it five or six times. Do three sets of three exercises, resting between them. You’ll want two to five minutes between sets so your systems can recover fully.

You don’t need a separate session

Doing a couple of power exercises a few times a week is more effective than doing many of them once a week. A simple approach is to add a 10-minute power block to the beginning of any regular strength workout. That could be three rounds of 10 kettlebell swings (which help with the posterior power chain), medicine ball throws and slams (to improve upper body speed) and weighted squat jumps (lower body).

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Runs can also be tweaked to include power work. “You could do short periods of sprinting, maybe five or 10 strides as quickly as you can,” says Perkin. “Or stop briefly and do a few vertical jumps.”For those who aren’t confident with weights or jumping, Breen recommends doing medicine ball throws while seated (they’re still effective).

Take it steady

On first trying power training, it’s tempting to reach for heavier weights than necessary, says Dinsdale. Instead start lighter. “Use about 50 to 60% of whatever your maximum is for that movement [your maximum is the weight you can only lift once], and then build up,” he says. He adds that there’s very little benefit to going very heavy with these kinds of exercises if your focus is building mind-muscle connection.

Because you’re moving quickly, safety matters. As well as lighter weights, it’s important to focus on maintaining good form. If you’re unsure, Dinsdale recommends working with a trainer or taking gym classes while you build confidence.

Don’t be fooled by the name of workouts

Confusingly, powerlifting – lifting heavy weights without a time limit – doesn’t actually train power. Olympic weightlifting – with moves like the clean-and-jerk, where a barbell must be moved quickly off the floor and then into the air – does. For most people, power walking doesn’t train power either.

Use power to break through a plateau

Power training can also help people who feel stuck in their strength training. “When you lift weights you can reach a plateau where it becomes difficult to increase muscle size further,” says Perkin.

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Adding lighter power work for a few weeks can sometimes unlock further gains. It forces your body to adapt by increasing the efficiency of the neuromuscular system. This enhances your ability to move heavy weights when you go back to them. “Then you have the opportunity to grow more muscle again. There’s a crossover effect,” adds Perkin.

Try a sport

If gyms feel intimidating and you’re right at the start of a power journey, playing sport can be another way to develop a beginner level of power. Activities such as tennis, padel, football or netball involve short bursts of acceleration that engage the mind-muscle connection, with the added social benefits. Contact sports, such as rugby and boxing, require explosive power too. The most important thing is finding a varied routine you enjoy.

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We can’t all be astronauts, but the Artemis II crew has fitness lessons for everyone

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We can’t all be astronauts, but the Artemis II crew has fitness lessons for everyone

The Artemis II crew — Christina Koch (left), Jeremy Hansen, Victor Glover and Reid Wiseman — have to share tight quarters aboard the Orion spacecraft on their way home. But even with limited space, they can still get a solid workout in — thanks to a very special piece of equipment.

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Even a few days away from Earth can significantly alter the human body. Without the constant pull of gravity on the skeleton, muscle and bone can quickly atrophy. To combat this immediate physical decline, the four astronauts aboard Orion on the Artemis II mission are using a specially designed machine known as the flywheel.

In a video blog posted before the crew launched, Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen compares the flywheel to a rowing machine. “Like a cardiovascular workout where you row at a lower resistance and a fast pace,” Hansen explains as he demonstrates the flywheel’s functionality. Astronauts strap their feet onto a small platform and pull on a handle connected to a cable. Pulling spins a flywheel. It works like a yo-yo, according to NASA — astronauts get as much resistance as they put into it.

The Artemis II crew exercises on Orion using a flywheel, a simple cable-based device for aerobic and resistance workouts.

The Artemis II crew exercises on Orion using a flywheel, a simple cable-based device for aerobic and resistance workouts.
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The flywheel is small, not unlike an extra large shoebox. Working in Orion’s tight quarters — only 316 cubic feet , about the size of a smallish bedroom — engineers had to design this device to perform with utmost efficiency, so that it can both provide a cardiovascular workout and resistance exercises up to 400 pounds. Astronauts can use it to do weightlifting moves like squats, deadlifts and curls.

Before the astronauts, there were the pillownauts 

The flywheel has been years in the making. Jessica Scott, an exercise physiologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, worked on early prototypes for NASA, anticipating that astronauts would be vulnerable to rapid muscle atrophy without physical exertion.

Scott compares ten days in space to ten days in bed. Atrophying for that amount of time, says Scott, “You would feel very weak and your muscles start to lose size very quickly.” The heart, she stresses, is especially vulnerable with this decline in strength.

When recruiting people to study these early flywheel prototypes, says Scott, researchers looked for 30 subjects willing to lie in bed for 70 days. She and her colleagues weren’t sure they would be easy to recruit.

Turns out, people were eager to spend hours a day reclining in the name of science.

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“We had over 10,000 people apply for 30 positions,” says Scott.

They called themselves the “pillownauts.”

Researchers divided these participants into different groups. Some stayed in bed all day. Some of them broke their bed rest in order to work out on a more traditional suite of exercise equipment, and some of them used the flywheel. The goal was not to improve fitness, but to prevent declines.

The flywheel, says Scott, delivered the results researchers were hoping.

“What was really exciting was that the small device could prevent the declines, the same amount that a full gym could do,” she says.

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Other missions — like those aboard the International Space Station — have full suites of exercise equipment. The flywheel has not yet been tested for longer durations, but Scott says she’s hopeful it could also provide fitness for astronauts in longer periods of gravity deprivation.

Not everyone’s an astronaut, but everyone ages

Even for people who are not planning on orbiting the moon — this research has important implications, says Thomas Lang, a radiologist who studies bone and muscle loss and has worked with NASA on exercise science for previous missions.

“You start childhood and then as you grow your bone density and mass reach a peak,” says Lang, “in your late twenties or early thirties.”

Those who are lucky to live to old age, he says, will experience hormonal changes that lead to bone loss over time. For women, that escalates sharply in menopause. “That’s a big whopping decline,” says Lang.

Men’s decline may not be as dramatic, says Lang, but they are also vulnerable, especially as they live into their 70s and 80s.

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NASA researcher Jessica Scott is also hopeful this work could have broader applications for the general public. Few of us will travel to space, but many of us can relate to dealing with time and space constraints when it comes to exercise, says Scott.

“One day we could all be having our own flywheel,” she says — something small enough to fit under a desk at work, or in the corner of an office.

After his first 30-minute aerobic session with the device, astronaut Reid Wiseman said he was happy to report that in addition to providing a good workout, he was pleased the flywheel didn’t drive his roommates too crazy. No one had to wear ear plugs to block out the sound.

“ It is a really good piece of gear and we can actually get a nice workout,” says Wiseman. “I look forward to the next time I get to try a resistance workout.”

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Surprising study finds this simple seated exercise reduces glucose spikes by 50% – here’s how

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Surprising study finds this simple seated exercise reduces glucose spikes by 50% – here’s how

While you probably know that walking after eating and avoiding sitting for prolonged periods of time can reduce glucose spikes and help manage blood sugar levels, a recent study shows that something much simpler could be just as effective: seated soleus push-ups, a.k.a. seated calf raises.

The research was done on an equal number of men and women in their late 20s to early 30s, and involved them performing continuous soleus push-ups after consuming a glucose drink. Blood glucose and insulin were then measured at various intervals over time. The same measurements were taken on participants after consuming the drink, without the soleus push-ups, and responses were compared.

Doing the exercise led to a 52% reduction in glucose spikes, and a 60% lower insulin response, proving that you may not even need to leave your desk or sofa to improve blood sugar control.

There’s something unique about the exercise that makes it superior to others. ‘There’s a muscle in your calf called the soleus muscle,’ French biochemist Jessie Inchauspé, a.k.a. The Glucose Goddess, explained during an episode of Steven Barlett’s podcast, The Diary of a CEO. ‘This muscle is very good at soaking up glucose from your blood stream, so this is an easy hack you can do after you east something sweet – just do some calf raises at your desk, nobody will notice. In studies they do hours of this, but even just one minute is better than nothing.’

What’s important to reap the rewards is that the exercise is performed after eating (as in the study, where participants did it after consuming a glucose drink), and that reps are continuous as opposed to performed in sets with rest. This is because the sustained activation is what drives the glucose uptake – the continuous muscle contractions ensure glucose levels can’t rebound during rest intervals.

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The authors of the study added that the exercise is a practical low-cost strategy – and one that could be particularly useful for people who are sedentary, elderly or have limited mobility.

Unless you’re diabetic, insulin resistant, or have metabolic risk factors such as PCOS, remember that glucose spikes are normal. They’re simply part of the digestion process and healthy bodies are capable of returning to baseline glucose efficiently. You don’t need to strictly avoid spikes, but better management of blood sugar can help energy levels and appetite, even without medical conditions. Speak to a medical professional if you’re unsure.

How to do soleus push-ups

  1. Sit upright with your feet flat on the floor, knees bent at about 90 degrees.
  2. Lift your heels while keeping the balls of your feet on the ground (like a small calf raise).
  3. Lower your heels back down in a slow, controlled motion.
  4. Repeat continuously at a steady, gentle pace for an extended period (aim for continuous movement over short sets with rests in between).

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How long to do them

While the study involved participants performing the exercise continuously for around four hours, a separate study proved that a reduction in glucose spikes occurred around the 30-minute mark. It’s also worth noting that, anecdotally, Reddit users report a reduction in glucose spikes after just eight minutes, and Inchauspe affirms that ‘even one minute is better than nothing’.

The conclusion

Most of the existing research is based on a small sample size and performed in specific, controlled lab conditions – but the findings are promising proof that the exercise could be superior to other exercises for blunting glucose spikes, and could be an effective method for people who spend a lot of time sitting or those unable to employ other hacks, such as walking after meals. They’re not a magic bullet for everyone; any light activity after meals (like walking) is well-proven to manage blood sugar levels, but if you are unable to walk or perform other exercise, it’s worth a try.

Headshot of Bridie Wilkins

 As Women’s Health UK’s fitness director and a qualified Pilates and yoga instructor, Bridie Wilkins has been passionately reporting on exercise, health and nutrition since the start of her decade-long career in journalism. She secured her first role at Look Magazine, where her obsession with fitness began and she launched the magazine’s health and fitness column, Look Fit, before going on to become Health and Fitness writer at HELLO!. Since, she has written for Stylist, Glamour, Cosmopolitan, Marie Claire, Elle, The Metro, Runner’s World and Red.Now, she oversees all fitness content across womenshealthmag.com.uk and the print magazine, spearheading leading cross-platform franchises, such as ‘Fit At Any Age’, where we showcase the women proving that age is no barrier to exercise. She has also represented the brand on BBC Radio London, plus various podcasts and Substacks – all with the aim to encourage more women to exercise and show them how.Outside of work, find her trying the latest Pilates studio, testing her VO2 max for fun (TY, Oura), or posting workouts on Instagram.  

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