Research Digest
Research Library
Peer-reviewed papers from top journals, summarized and graded by evidence strength. Updated Mon, Wed & Fri.
May 31 – Jun 6, 2026
2 studiesStaying Active From Midlife Cuts Sarcopenia Risk by Up to 78%
In Norwegians tracked for over 30 years, those who stayed active from middle age into their 70s had 78% lower odds of confirmed muscle loss. Even people who started exercising later in life saw meaningful benefits. People who became inactive lost most of the protection.
Two Hours of Weekly Strength Training Hits the Sweet Spot for Longevity
In nearly 150,000 adults tracked for up to 30 years, doing 90 to 119 minutes of strength training per week was linked to a 13% lower risk of dying from any cause. More than two hours weekly added no extra benefit. Combining strength work with aerobic exercise gave the biggest mortality drop.
May 17–23, 2026
4 studiesExercise Is the Only Proven Way to Extend Healthy Years, Review Finds
Researchers looked at 15 trials testing ways to extend healthspan, the years you live in good health. Exercise, alone or combined with other approaches, was the only thing that consistently improved how well people functioned and felt. Other approaches like supplements and calorie restriction had too little evidence to draw conclusions.
Strong Daily Rhythms Plus Exercise Cut Death Risk by Two-Thirds
Adults whose sleep-wake cycles followed a strong daily rhythm and who got enough exercise had a 65% lower risk of dying from any cause over about 7 years. The combo also slashed cardiovascular death risk by 75%. Part of the benefit seemed to come from slower biological aging, hinting that consistent routines matter as much as the workout itself.
Exercise Builds Muscle and Strength in Postmenopausal Women With Sarcopenia
Postmenopausal women often lose muscle as hormones shift and age catches up. Looking at 17 trials, structured exercise clearly helped this group gain muscle and strength. Their grip strength, walking speed, and balance all improved. Body weight stayed about the same, so the gains were about muscle, not the scale.
Why Higher-Intensity Workouts May Protect Fitness Better as You Age
Older adults aged 70 to 77 who did high-intensity training held onto their aerobic fitness much better over 5 years than those doing moderate workouts. Women doing high-intensity training showed essentially no decline in VO2 peak, while moderate exercisers dropped 4.6%. Intensity mattered more than total exercise time for slowing the age-related drop in fitness.
May 10–16, 2026
4 studiesCreatine Plus Lifting May Help Postmenopausal Women Keep Muscle and Strength
Looking at seven trials in postmenopausal women, creatine combined with resistance training added small but real gains in lean mass and leg strength. The sweet spot was at least 5 grams a day paired with lifting. Lower doses without exercise did nothing, and bone density didn't budge either way. Side effects were mild and matched placebo.
Blood NAD+ Levels Stay Flat With Age, Challenging Popular Aging Theory
One of the most repeated ideas in longevity is that NAD+ declines as we age, a story that helped make NR and NMN household names in the space. This large, carefully controlled study takes a closer look. Across seven independent cohorts and more than 300 people, researchers found that whole-blood NAD+ levels stayed remarkably stable with age, and didn't shift meaningfully in response to exercise, protein-rich diets, or multimodal lifestyle interventions in older adults. Importantly, NR supplementation did raise blood NAD+ as expected, confirming that the supplements work pharmacologically, the question is just whether blood NAD+ is the right thing to be measuring in the first place.
Exercise May Ease Anxiety, Especially Mind-Body and Aerobic Workouts
Looking at 10 studies of about 2,400 adults with generalized anxiety, researchers found exercise was linked to lower anxiety symptoms. Mind-body workouts like yoga and aerobic exercise showed the biggest effects, while resistance training results were unclear. Programs lasting 8 weeks or more with sessions of 21 to 40 minutes seemed most helpful. However, the studies varied widely, so the authors caution this is suggestive, not definitive.
Just 5,700 Daily Steps Cut Death Risk By 13% In Older Adults
Looking at dozens of studies with over 367,000 older adults, regular walking was tied to lower risk of death, disease, and cognitive decline. Each extra 1,000 daily steps was linked to a 13% drop in death from any cause. Walking pace did not change the benefit, so slow walks counted too.
Disclaimer: Research summaries are provided for informational purposes only and do not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to your health routine.
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