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Senior Woman And Her Daughter Running On The Beach.
Officially, menopause is caused by the natural decline of estrogen, and it鈥檚 diagnosed after 12 consecutive months without a menstrual cycle. (Photo: BONNINSTUDIO/Stocksy)

The Athlete’s Guide to Menopause

Much more than fertility changes when menopause hits. Here's how to train through it.

Published: 
Senior Woman And Her Daughter Running On The Beach.
(Photo: BONNINSTUDIO/Stocksy)

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Menopause, like menstruation,听is often talked about in whispers. We 诲辞苍鈥檛 shout about reaching the period of life when we鈥檙e no longer fertile, perhaps because many of the symptoms of menopause are intensely personal: Hot flashes. Night sweats. Weight gain. Mood swings. Painful sex. Insomnia.

It can also wreak havoc on physiological assets we鈥檝e spent a lifetime cultivating, like lean muscle, strong bones, and the ability to bounce back from a challenging workout with eight hours of restorative, protein-synthesizing sleep. Until recently, many of these symptoms were written off as a natural part of aging, as inescapable as grayinghair and wrinkles. But recently, : it鈥檚 a lack of estrogen鈥攏ot advancing age鈥攖hat鈥檚 behind much of the bone deterioration, fat gain, and lean-muscle loss associated with menopause. And that鈥檚 good news for aging athletes, since hormonal changes are easier to fight than the inexorable march of time.

Why It Matters

Officially, menopause is caused by the natural decline of estrogen, and it鈥檚听diagnosed after 12 consecutive months without a menstrual cycle. For Americans, this usually occurs听around age 51, but perimenopause鈥攖he preceding transitional phase鈥攃an last anywhere from several months to ten听years听and can begin as early as your thirties.

The detrimental effects of changing hormones typically begin with perimenopause,听soon after estrogen levels begin to fall.听 include听a loss in bone density and 听and an increase in 鈥攑补谤迟颈肠耻濒补谤濒测 . Estrogen loss also slows your metabolism and .听In part due to these changes, many people see听听by the time they reach menopause.

You 诲辞苍鈥檛 have to be an expert to realize that this all translates to feeling heavier and听slower听and becoming more prone to broken bones. But while this may sound like a major听bummer, 诲辞苍鈥檛 stress: there are steps you can take to stave off the effects of estrogen decline.

Mitigating Menopause-Related Changes

鈥淢enopause doesn鈥檛 mean the end of being a competitive athlete,鈥 says exercise physiologist and nutrition scientist Stacy Sims, who researches training and recovery specifically in relation听to female physiology.听Sims鈥檚 prescription to outsmart estrogen depletion听looks like this: 鈥淟ift heavy shit鈥攃arefully. Do high-intensity interval training and plyometrics. Up your protein. Do less volume and more intensity. Recover longer.鈥 Here鈥檚 how all that breaks down.

Lift Heavy

鈥淵ou have to try to prevent the loss of muscle and bone, and while cardio will make your heart and lungs fitter, it won鈥檛 increase鈥攁nd might not even prevent鈥攍oss of muscle mass,鈥 says听, an exercise physiologist and a professor of geriatric medicine at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. 鈥淭he research is preliminary, but it suggests that those who do resistance training seem to preserve the level of lean mass they had before menopause.鈥 That鈥檚 enough reason to hit the gym, get a set of resistance bands, or find a buddy with a weight bench.

Sims is a huge fan of CrossFit,听because it combines range-of-motion exercise and heavy resistance, but if you鈥檙e not into the competitive culture of CrossFit听or 诲辞苍鈥檛 feel comfortable returning to the gym until there鈥檚 a coronavirus vaccine, there are plenty of other ways to add resistance to your routine. Dumbbells, resistance bands, and body-weight exercises work just as well.

Ditch Endurance Workouts for HIIT

Resistance training may be the most effective way to build lean muscle mass, but cardio still plays a critical role in keeping you strong and healthy during the menopausal transition and beyond. It鈥檚 linked to a healthy heart and lungs, helps burn fat, and听. But if you want to reap the most benefits from your cardio, choose high-intensity, calorie-torching interval sessions over long, slow-distance workouts.

鈥淓strogen naturally prompts your body to synthesize protein into lean muscle. When that鈥檚 taken away, you need a new stimulus,鈥 Sims says.听High-intensity interval training (HIIT)听can be that stimulus. It prompts your body to and more effectively than a slow-burn endurance workout. It also helps your body continue to process insulin efficiently, making you less prone to , which increases the risk of being overweight, having high blood pressure, and developing heart disease or .

Train Hard, Recover Harder

Athletes in menopause are prone to overtraining, particularly if they鈥檙e trying to regain the leaner, toned听body they enjoyed premenopause. 鈥淵ou might try to push harder and longer to get rid of this new belly fat, but ultimately听that backfires, because it puts you in a state of low-energy, high-stress听,鈥 Sims says.

To be clear, cortisol on its own isn鈥檛 a bad thing. Yes, it鈥檚 known as the stress hormone,听released in traditional fight-or-flight scenarios, but cortisol is also responsible for that extra surge of adrenaline on the starting line of a race, and it can provide a little immunity to the pain and suffering that鈥檚 to come. Cortisol cycling occurs when you鈥檙e under constant stress, which can force your cortisol levels to stay elevated for far longer than is needed to outrun your rivals in a competition. Eventually, cortisol imbalance can lead to weight gain, exhaustion, and a loss in muscle mass鈥攋ust what you 诲辞苍鈥檛 want. The secret? More rest.

鈥淵ou need to work out with intensity, but you also have to recover harder,鈥 Sims says. 鈥淓verything just takes a little longer.鈥澨鼳nd remember that the ways you might have measured your fitness in the past鈥攕hort recovery times, a toned stomach鈥攁ren鈥檛 good gauges of your hard work as you age.

Sims recommends shorter training blocks for aging athletes. Think along the lines of a two-week build-up of exercise, followed by one week of less intense movement, as opposed to three weeks on, one week off. She also recommends mobility work like foam rolling, dynamic stretching, and body-weight movements听to offset stiffening tendons and ligaments. A heart-rate monitor or other fitness wearable, such as the听,听which calculates recovery based on perceived strain and sleep quality, may also help you avoid overtraining.

Hormone-related sleep issues present another challenge.听Both estrogen and progesterone affect sleep quality and quantity; as your hormones drop, ,听resulting in poor recovery. (Recurring bouts of hot flashes and night sweats 诲辞苍鈥檛 help, either. And yes鈥攜ou can blame estrogen loss for that, too.) But before you reach for the melatonin, Sims recommends downing a glass of tart 30 minutes instead. Not only has tart cherry juice been shown to听听and reduce听听(prompting ), it鈥檚 also one of the few food sources of听

Change Your Workout Fuel

Declining estrogen causes your body to become more sensitive to carbohydrates and insulin, which wreak听havoc on your metabolism. You may also struggle to digest fructose, which is a common ingredient in sports-nutrition products. 鈥淐hange your diet to emphasize high-quality protein, fat, and carbohydrates from fruit, vegetables, and whole grains,鈥 Sims says. She also recommends replacing fructose-containing sports-fuel products with those containing simple sugars such as glucose, dextrose, and sucrose, which fuel menopausal bodies with fewer associated gastrointestinal issues.

You also need to eat protein. A lot of it. Your daily protein needs vary based on activity levels. But for anyone in menopause, Sims recommends about 1.1 grams of protein per pound of body weight. For a 150-pound person, that鈥檚 more than 160 grams of protein per day.

While that protein should be spread throughout the day, Sims is adamant about one point: menopausal people need to consume a whopping 40 grams of high-quality protein with about four听grams of (one of nine essential amino acids) within 30 minutes of a hard workout to help build lean muscle and recover. Two scoops of most whey protein powders (or a leucine supplement) will get you there, but you can also get leucine from food sources, including eggs, soybeans, chicken, almonds, beef, salmon, and peanuts. There鈥檚 also听 suggesting that听getting enough high-quality leucine may reduce cognitive impairment鈥攕ometimes called brain fog鈥攖hat many people cite as a menopausal symptom. That鈥檚 because it helps decrease levels of tryptophan in the brain. While tryptophan is a generally beneficial amino acid that can be converted into serotonin and melatonin (which help听 and听), too much of it can make you feel fuzzy and fatigued.

Consider Supplementation

Make sure you get enough calcium and听. The National Osteoporosis Foundation recommends a total daily intake of 1,200 milligrams听calcium and between 800 to 1,000 international units (IUs) of听 for good听. For reference, a glass of milk contains about 300 milligrams of calcium, and one serving of salmon nets you between 250 and 1,000 IUs of vitamin D (wild-caught salmon boasts higher levels of vitamin D). If you aren鈥檛 sure you鈥檙e getting enough from your diet, 诲辞苍鈥檛 hesitate to take a听supplement.

Don鈥檛 Give Up

If you鈥檙e months or years past the menopausal transition, 诲辞苍鈥檛 despair. There鈥檚 still time to mitigate its听effects on your body.

鈥淓xercise can鈥檛 entirely reverse the effects of declining estrogen on the body,鈥 the University of Colorado鈥檚 Kohrt says. 鈥淏ut there are so many potential health benefits, regardless of what you do. Anything is better than nothing鈥攁nd it鈥檚 never too late to start.鈥

Lead Photo: BONNINSTUDIO/Stocksy

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