CABI Blog

Tai-Chi-SymbolAs an Editor with varied responsibilities at CABI, information I come across at work often overlaps with what I do away from my desk. Thus, as a long-time practitioner of tai chi who isn't getting any younger, I was interested when looking for subjects to write about for the Leisure Tourism Database, to come across the latest piece of research on the health benefits of tai chi for 'older adults'.

The study from Hong Kong, recently published online in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, found that older subjects regularly practicing tai chi were less likely to suffer high blood pressure, and were physically stronger in particular areas such as the knees.

While it's hardly news that exercising regularly, whatever your age, is good for you, what is interesting about this particular piece of research is that it compares subjects who have similar levels of physical activity, so that the comparison is between tai chi and other forms of exercise. The study involved 65 elderly subjects from Hong Kong, 29 recruited from local Tai Chi clubs who had each practised Tai Chi for at least 1.5 hours a week for three years, and 36 controls with no Tai Chi experience. All subjects' physical activity levels were defined according to metabolic index units as light, moderate and heavy — but there were no differences between the two groups.

Initial results showed that the Tai Chi subjects were better in almost all haemodynamic observations — including blood pressure, vascular resistance, and pulse pressure. Measurements also showed that both large and small artery compliance was significantly higher in the Tai Chi group (by 40-44%). Additional analysis showed that the Tai Chi subjects had greater average muscle strength in both their knee extensors and flexors.

The findings, say the investigators, of better muscle strength without jeopardising arterial compliance suggest that Tai Chi may well be a suitable exercise for older people to improve both cardiovascular function and body strength. A number of studies, they explain, have shown that strength training to improve muscle function and offset the effects of aging have also been accompanied by a decline in arterial compliance. "Evidence that strength training could change arterial compliance in middle-aged and older subjects is still elusive," they note.

Principal investigator Dr William Tsang from the Hong Kong Polytechnic University in Hong Kong, says "this is the first study to investigate the possible effects of Tai Chi on arterial compliance by comparing older Tai Chi practitioners with non-practitioners similar in age and activity level. The improvement in arterial compliance could have resulted from a combination of aerobic training, stretching, mental concentration and calm meditation during Tai Chi movement."

Because Tai Chi can be practised at any time, anywhere, and without the constraints of equipment or a gymnasium, Dr Tsang added that this traditional Chinese exercise could be a good exercise strategy for older adults, both for vascular health and for muscle strengthening.

Unlike some papers on which say they are about 'elderly' or older people, the Hong Kong study is of people with average age in their early 70's. Slightly alarmingly for someone now in my 50's, I found a systematic review in Family Practice claiming to study the benefits of tai chi "in the elderly" which selected studies where the age of the participants was over 50: a little early to be called elderly from my perspective, though I may have thought differently 30 years ago! In another tai chi paper by Thornton et al. found on CAB Abstracts, I'd be very much at the top end of the age range for a study group classed as middle-aged, which in this study was between 33 and 55. But as I head into the age range of 'older adults' as defined in the medical literature, at least I have the reassurance of knowing I'm doing the right kind of exercise to keep me fit and healthy for a while longer!

CAB Abstracts indexes around 100 papers on tai chi. See the references below for further reading on health benefits of this martial art.

References

Lu X, Hui-Chan CWY, Tsang WWN. Tai Chi, arterial compliance, and muscle strength in older adults. Eur J Prevent Cardiol, 2012 DOI: 10.1177/2047487312443483

Verhagen AP, Immink M, van der Meulen A and Bierma-Zeinstra SMA. The efficacy of Tai Chi Chuan in older adults: a systematic review. Family Practice 2004; 21: 107-113. DOI: 10.1093/fampra/cmh122

Thornton, E. W.; Sykes, K. S.; Tang, W. K Health benefits of Tai Chi exercise: improved balance and blood pressure in middle-aged women. Health Promotion International, 2004, 19, 1, pp 33-38, 31 ref. DOI: 10.1093/heapro/dah105

Yau KwaiSang [Yau, K. S. M. ]; Packer, T. L. Health and well-being through T'ai Chi: perceptions of older adults in Hong Kong. Leisure Studies, 2002, 21, 2, pp 163-178, many ref. DOI: 10.1080/026143602110138850

Huang YinTsen; Wang ChunHsiung; Wu YiFan. Adhering to a Tai Chi Chuan exercise program improves vascular resistance and cardiac function. International Journal of Gerontology, 2011, 5, 3, pp 150-154. DOI: 10.1016/j.ijge.2011.09.037

Wong, A. M. K.; Chou ShihWei; Huang ShuChun; Lan Ching; Chen HsiehChing; Hong WeiHsien; Chen, C. P. C.; Pei YuCheng. Does different exercise have the same effect of health promotion for the elderly? Comparison of training-specific effect of Tai Chi and swimming on motor control. Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics, 2011, 53, 2, pp e133-e137. DOI: 10.1016/j.archger.2010.07.009

Leave a Reply