Published: 06:10 EST, 3 December 2014 | Updated: 14:47 EST, 3 December 2014
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The simple exercise of sitting down and standing up again without holding onto anything, could suggest how long you have to live.
This is the belief of a group of physicians, who came up with the ‘sitting-rising test’ to measure their patients’ flexibility and strength.
They developed a scoring system for the test and found that people who scored three points or less out of 10, were more than five times as likely to die within six years, as those who scored more than eight points.
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The simple exercise of sitting down and standing up again without holding onto anything, could suggest how long you have to live. This diagram shows how to take the 'sitting rising test'
Claudio Gil Araujo, of Gama Filho University in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, was among the doctors who originally developed the sitting rising test (SRT) to quickly assess the flexibility of athletes, but he now uses it to persuade his patients that they need to stay active to maintain their muscle and balance, and live longer, Discover Magazine reported.
As we age, our muscles tend to become weaker and a loss of balance means we are increasingly likely to fall.
Current ways to test frailty can be time-consuming, impractical and inaccurate for small doctors’ surgeries, but experts are keen to keep older people moving.
Dr Araujo says that anyone can take the SRT because no equipment is needed.
See the sitting-rising test in action and find out what it means
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As we age, our muscles tend to become weaker and a loss of balance means we are increasingly likely to fall. Doctors are keen for older people to keep exercising - a stock image of a class in Florida is pictured
TAKE THE SITTING RISING TEST
WARNING: Do not attempt if you have arthritis or are worried the exercise may cause you injury.
Wearing comfortable clothes and no shoes, make sure you have plenty of space around you.
Lower yourself into a cross-legged sitting position, without leaning on anything.
Stand up again without using your hands, knees or arms to push yourself up.
Get someone to score you, take the test in front of a mirror to notice any wobbles or ‘cheats’.
The first part of the test –sitting down – is scored out of five, as is the second part –standing up – making a total score of 10.
Subtract one point every time you use a hand or knee for support.
Dock half a point every time you noticeably lose balance and wobble and combine them to calculate your final score.
The study found that every point increase in the test, was linked to a 21 per cent decrease in mortality from all causes.
In a study, published in the European Journal of Cardiology, the researchers described how 2002 adults aged between 51 and 80 took the SRT at Clinimex Exercise Medicine Clinic in Rio.
They found that patients who scored fewer than eight points out of 10 on the test, were twice as likely to die within the next six years, compared with people with more perfect scores.
One point was deducted each time a person used their hand or knee for support to either sit down or stand up, while half a point was deducted for losing their balance.
The experts found that people who scored three points or fewer, were more than five times as likely to die within the same period.
They wrote in the study: ‘Musculoskeletal fitness, as assessed by SRT, was a significant predictor of mortality in 51–80-year-old subjects.’
The study found that every point increase in the test, was linked to a 21 per cent decrease in mortality from all causes.
However, chartered physio-therapist Sammy Margo said that the exercise may be 'quite ambitious' for older people in the UK.
This is possibly because of cultural differences, because Britons are not used to regularly sitting on the floor, like in some other cultures. In this way, it may not be terribly accurate at predicting life expectancy.
She told MailOnline that there is a risk that people with early signs of arthritis in the knee could feel the strain when trying the exercise, which she described as 'quite hard work'.
'The advice is not to endorse the test – it sounds as if it is somewhat simplistic and it is not widely used,' she said.
UK physiotherapists tend to prefer another test, where patients stand up from a sitting position and see how many times they can repeat the action in 30 seconds.
'The "30 second chair test" is more appropriate and is used as a prognostic,' she said.
'It's simplistic, quick and easy and gives a good indicator for falls.'
The test measures leg strength and endurance - which are needed to move around without falling - rather than flexibility and agility like the SRT.
Healthy people aged between 60 and 64 are expected to stand and sit more than 12 times for women and 14 times for men in 30 seconds. A good score for a 90 to 94-year-old is siting and standing more than seven times for man and four times for women.
While Ms Margo did not recommend the SRT, she said it does 'address everything' in terms of a person's strength and flexibility.
I have a bum right knee, and cannot sit in the manner shown (cross-legged). I cannot extend my leg into a totally straight position when standing either, and my degree of flexion is also limited.
But I don't need that exercise to predict when I am going to die. I already know. Makes life a whole lot simpler.
Guess I need to start my good bye thread. I cant do that at all.
It was nice to know you all.
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It doesn't explain how this predicts your death. We all know we're gonna die someday...lol. Does it mean that if it takes you 10 minutes to get up and down you have 10 years of life left?
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“Until I discovered cooking, I was never really interested in anything.” ― Julia Child ―
It doesn't explain how this predicts your death. We all know we're gonna die someday...lol. Does it mean that if it takes you 10 minutes to get up and down you have 10 years of life left?
I think the correlations is this:
If you're already old and sick, (1) this will be a real challenge, and (2) you're old and sick so your life expectancy is shorter than an athletic teenager.
Maybe I'll take the standing-sitting repeatedly as fast as possible for 30 seconds challenge. Later. Maybe.
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It doesn't explain how this predicts your death. We all know we're gonna die someday...lol. Does it mean that if it takes you 10 minutes to get up and down you have 10 years of life left?
I think the correlations is this:
If you're already old and sick, (1) this will be a real challenge, and (2) you're old and sick so your life expectancy is shorter than an athletic teenager.
Maybe I'll take the standing-sitting repeatedly as fast as possible for 30 seconds challenge. Later. Maybe.
That still doesn't explain how it predicts your death. If this was the test of when I should be dead you're talking to a ghost...lol
__________________
“Until I discovered cooking, I was never really interested in anything.” ― Julia Child ―
It doesn't explain how this predicts your death. We all know we're gonna die someday...lol. Does it mean that if it takes you 10 minutes to get up and down you have 10 years of life left?
I think the correlations is this:
If you're already old and sick, (1) this will be a real challenge, and (2) you're old and sick so your life expectancy is shorter than an athletic teenager.
Maybe I'll take the standing-sitting repeatedly as fast as possible for 30 seconds challenge. Later. Maybe.
That still doesn't explain how it predicts your death. If this was the test of when I should be dead you're talking to a ghost...lol
It's not really claiming to predict your death. It's saying that people who do poorly on this test are LIKELY to die SOONER than people who do well on the test.
Sp probably success doing this task correlates with things that also correlate with life expectancy of more than 10 years.
So, if you're already sick and likely to check out, you're also likely to get a low score. Makes perfect sense to me.
When I was selling pacemakers, often family members would ask me how long the patient was likely to live after the pacemaker was implanted.
I always reminded them that I'm not a doctor and I don't know this patient AT ALL, but...
since pacemakers are most often implanted in people who are already elderly, the life expectancy with the pacemaker is usually exactly the same as it would have been if the person didn't need the pacemaker. Average from first pacemaker is 7 years, since the average age is over 70.
But people with uncontrolled diabetes, or other life-limiting conditions, still had those other conditions, and that would be the concern.
No one seemed either overjoyed or upset to hear that.
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The Principle of Least Interest: He who cares least about a relationship, controls it.