Here’s a major reason your workouts don’t seem to reap the same results as before – muscle atrophy as you age.
A study found that women can experience up to 10% decline in muscle mass during perimenopause and menopause. This is crucial, given that muscle mass affects metabolism.
At rest, muscles burn more calories than fat. So when muscles shrink, the female body consumes less energy. The result? A lower resting metabolism.
Increasing exercise frequency and adding muscle-strengthening activities is a great way to burn more calories and build healthy muscles.
Experts like Dr. Axe suggest that participating in strength training – such as lifting weights, can help to improve metabolism because it builds lean muscle mass, which naturally uses more calories than body fat does3.
However, other credible sources like Medline Plus, an online information service produced by the United States National Library of Medicine, seem to disagree.
Medline Plus thinks that strength training can help to build muscles, but it is not enough to stimulate metabolism or achieve weight loss results because most of us will only gain a few pounds of muscles.
Furthermore, unless we are constantly exercising those muscles, they don’t actually burn that many calories4.
But who’s right or wrong? I think they can both be correct – as long as you keep to a healthy workout schedule and build more muscles mass over 6-12 months, you could enjoy the metabolism-boosting effects of strength training and weightlifting.