A comprehensive Swedish study spanning 47 years identifies three critical performance peaks across the lifespan: lower body power peaks in the early twenties, aerobic capacity in the late twenties to early thirties, and upper body endurance around ages 34-36. This multi-peak model replaces the outdated single-peak paradigm that has dominated fitness expectations for decades.
Equally important for practitioners and individuals is understanding decline trajectories. Fitness decline accelerates with age—from approximately 0.6 percent annually in the twenties to 2.5 percent in the sixties. However, the research offers encouraging evidence that starting exercise at any age yields better outcomes than remaining sedentary. The substantial individual variation in aging suggests that appropriate, age-tailored training interventions can meaningfully preserve functional capacity throughout the lifespan, even for those beginning fitness programs later in life.
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