100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

UniSC-led research focuses on body composition in later life

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Media demand fair pay for local news

Regional news publishers, including Sunshine Coast Publishing Company, have welcomed the release of draft News Bargaining Incentive legislation. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Tuesday unveiled More

Weapon checks ramp up on Coast under Jack’s Law

More than 4500 people have been scanned on the Sunshine Coast since a crackdown on knife crime started 10 months ago. Police have seized 22 More

‘Snapped’: man to stand trial for cold case murder

A man accused of murdering his partner and leaving her body at the base of a cliff snapped before her death, a court has More

Police investigate fatal crash

The Forensic Crash Unit is investigating after a fatal traffic crash on the Sunshine Coast. Police and emergency services attended Diamond Valley Road at Diamond More

Property demolitions underway for road upgrade

The first of several properties are being removed in the heart of the Sunshine Coast, to make way for a revamped thoroughfare. Two homes are More

‘Scared for years’: child of cold-case murder accused

A man accused of murdering his girlfriend decades ago pressured his child to tell police he stayed at home on the night she died, More

New research led by University of the Sunshine Coast (UniSC) academics is examining how different exercise intensities affect body composition in older adults.

The study revealed that high intensity interval training (HIIT) may be the optimal exercise for reducing body fat while maintaining muscle mass in older adults.

“We found that high, medium and low intensity exercises all led to modest fat loss but only HIIT retained lean muscle,” lead author and exercise physiologist Dr Grace Rose said.

The study examined how the intensity of different exercises could influence body composition in healthy older adults.

“While moderate training reduced fat mass, it also caused a small decline in lean muscle,” she said.

“Both high and moderate intensities improved the composition of weight carried around the middle. Further analysis is needed of the low intensity results.”

Dr Rose said the findings were particularly useful because body composition was implicated in the progression of many chronic diseases as people aged.

More than 120 healthy older adults from the Greater Brisbane region participated in the study, completing three exercise sessions a week in the gym for six months.

Their average age was 72 years old and average body mass index was 26kg/m2, categorised as normal for people aged over 65.

Help us deliver more news by registering for our FREE daily news feed. All it requires is your email at the bottom of this article.

Sandra Kershaw-Smith gets moving.

UniSC Associate Professor of Physiology and co-author Mia Schaumberg welcomed the timing of the paper published in the journal Maturitas, with collaborators including UniSC’s Healthy Ageing Research Cluster and The University of Queensland.

“With the festive season now behind most of us and New Year’s resolutions in full swing, this research can help inform people’s plans for healthy ageing in 2026,” she said.

“High intensity training in this study involved repeated short bursts, or intervals, of very hard exercise – where breathing is heavy and conversation is difficult – alternated with easier recovery periods.

“HIIT likely works better because it puts more stress on the muscles, giving the body a stronger signal to keep muscle tissue rather than lose it.”

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share