- Resistance training, any exercise that works muscles against a load, has well-established cardiovascular benefits including lower blood pressure, improved cholesterol, better insulin sensitivity, and reduced cardiovascular mortality.
- It also supports muscle mass, bone density, balance, and metabolic health, benefits that become increasingly important with age and are not delivered by cardio exercise alone.
- More muscle means a higher resting metabolic rate, the body burns more calories at rest, which supports weight management over the long term.
- Resistance training does not need to be strenuous or gym-based, resistance bands, bodyweight exercises, and light weights at home are all effective and appropriate for older adults.
- Most guidelines recommend resistance training at least two days per week alongside regular aerobic activity for cardiovascular benefit.
- Anyone with existing heart disease or significant cardiovascular risk factors should discuss an exercise plan with their doctor before starting a new resistance training program.
When people think about exercise for heart health, they typically think about walking, cycling, or swimming, aerobic activities that raise the heart rate and get the blood flowing. These are genuinely important, and the evidence supporting them is strong. But there is a parallel and equally compelling body of evidence for resistance training, and it tends to get far less attention in cardiac health conversations than it deserves.
Resistance training is not just about building muscle or aesthetics. For older adults in particular, it is one of the most powerful tools available for cardiovascular health, metabolic function, bone strength, and physical independence. If you are not doing some form of it already, this article explains why it is worth starting, and how straightforward it can be.
What Is Resistance Training?
Resistance training, also called strength training or weight training, is any form of exercise that works your muscles against a resistance load. This includes:
- Free weights dumbbells, barbells, kettlebells
- Resistance bands lightweight, portable, and excellent for older adults and beginners
- Bodyweight exercises squats, lunges, push-ups, wall sits, no equipment needed
- Weight machines gym-based, useful for controlled movement with guided resistance
- Everyday functional activities carrying shopping, gardening, climbing stairs, all count as resistance work
The common thread is that the muscles are working against a force, and adapting over time to become stronger, more efficient, and more metabolically active. It does not need to be heavy, intense, or gym-based to be effective.
The Cardiovascular Benefits
The cardiovascular evidence for resistance training is robust and increasingly well recognised in clinical guidelines. Regular resistance training has been shown to:
Lower blood pressure both systolic and diastolic blood pressure respond favourably to resistance training, with effects comparable to some medications in people with mild to moderate hypertension. The mechanism involves improved blood vessel elasticity and reduced peripheral vascular resistance.
Improve cholesterol and triglycerides resistance training raises HDL cholesterol and reduces triglycerides, contributing to a more favourable lipid profile over time.
Improve insulin sensitivity and blood sugar control muscle tissue is one of the primary sites of glucose uptake in the body. More muscle mass and better-conditioned muscle means more effective blood sugar regulation, directly relevant to cardiovascular risk given the strong link between insulin resistance and heart disease.
Reduce cardiovascular mortality population studies have consistently found that people who engage in regular resistance training have lower rates of cardiovascular death, even after accounting for aerobic exercise levels. A landmark study found that even one to two sessions per week was associated with significantly reduced cardiovascular mortality compared to no resistance training.
Resistance training and aerobic exercise are genuinely complementary, they deliver overlapping but distinct cardiovascular benefits. The evidence increasingly supports doing both rather than choosing between them. For older adults especially, resistance training addresses risks that walking alone simply cannot.
Beyond the Heart, Why Muscle Mass Matters as We Age
This is where the case for resistance training becomes particularly compelling for older adults, and for anyone thinking about their long-term health and independence.
Sarcopenia, The Silent Loss of Muscle
From around the age of 30, adults begin to lose muscle mass at a rate of approximately 3–5% per decade, a process called sarcopenia. Without deliberate resistance training, this loss accelerates significantly after 60. The consequences extend well beyond strength, sarcopenia is associated with falls, fractures, loss of independence, metabolic decline, and increased cardiovascular risk.
Resistance training is the most effective intervention available for preserving and rebuilding muscle mass at any age. The body retains a remarkable capacity to respond to resistance training even well into the 70s and 80s, it is never too late to start and see meaningful benefit.
Bone Density
Resistance training places load on bones as well as muscles, stimulating bone remodelling and helping maintain bone density. This is particularly important for post-menopausal women, who face accelerated bone loss and higher fracture risk. Weight-bearing resistance exercises are among the most evidence-supported strategies for reducing osteoporosis risk and maintaining skeletal health into older age.
Metabolism and Weight Management
Muscle is metabolically active tissue, it burns calories at rest. More muscle mass means a higher resting metabolic rate, meaning the body consumes more energy even when not exercising. This is one of the reasons resistance training supports long-term weight management more effectively than cardio exercise alone, cardio burns calories during exercise, but resistance training raises the baseline metabolic rate that persists around the clock.
For anyone managing weight alongside cardiovascular risk factors, the combination of resistance training and a heart-healthy diet is considerably more effective than diet or cardio alone.
Balance, Coordination, and Fall Prevention
Falls are one of the leading causes of injury and loss of independence in older adults, and many falls are preventable. Resistance training improves leg strength, stability, and coordination, all of which contribute to better balance and reduced fall risk. This is a quality-of-life benefit that is difficult to achieve through any other single intervention.
How to Get Started, It Doesn’t Need to Be Complicated
One of the barriers to resistance training for older adults and cardiac patients is the perception that it involves heavy weights, gyms, and strenuous effort. None of that is necessary. Effective resistance training for cardiovascular and general health can be done at home, with minimal or no equipment, at a gentle pace, and still deliver meaningful benefit.
- Resistance bands inexpensive, lightweight, and available in varying resistance levels. Seated band exercises are appropriate even for people with limited mobility. Excellent starting point for anyone new to resistance training.
- Bodyweight exercises chair squats (sitting and standing from a chair), wall push-ups, calf raises, and step-ups require no equipment and can be done in any room. These are genuinely effective and appropriate for older adults.
- Light dumbbells a pair of 1–3kg dumbbells is sufficient for many upper body exercises. Bicep curls, shoulder presses, and lateral raises done with light weight and controlled movement are low-risk and beneficial.
- Start with two sessions per week two 20–30 minute sessions covering the major muscle groups (legs, back, chest, arms) is the evidence-based minimum. This is a very achievable starting point.
- Focus on controlled movement slow, deliberate movement through the full range of motion is more effective and safer than rushing through repetitions with heavier weight.
- Progress gradually the principle of progressive overload, gradually increasing resistance or repetitions over time, is what drives continued adaptation. Start easy and build over weeks and months.
Is Resistance Training Safe for People with Heart Disease?
For most people, including many with well-managed heart disease, resistance training is safe and beneficial. The key is appropriate intensity and good technique, and for anyone with existing cardiovascular conditions, starting with guidance from a doctor or cardiac rehabilitation professional is sensible.
Cardiac rehabilitation programs increasingly include resistance training as a standard component, the evidence for its safety and benefit in post-heart attack and post-procedure patients is well established. If you have had a heart attack, stent, bypass surgery, or significant heart failure, ask your cardiologist about whether a supervised cardiac rehabilitation program including resistance training is appropriate for you.
If you have existing heart disease, uncontrolled high blood pressure, significant heart failure, or have recently had a cardiac procedure, speak with your cardiologist or GP before beginning a new resistance training program. They can advise on appropriate intensity, exercises to modify or avoid, and whether a supervised program would be beneficial.
Conclusion
Resistance training is one of the most evidence-supported and underutilised tools in cardiovascular prevention. Its benefits extend well beyond the heart, supporting muscle mass, bone density, metabolism, balance, and physical independence in ways that aerobic exercise alone cannot replicate. For older adults particularly, it is not an optional extra, it is a core component of healthy aging.
It does not need to be strenuous, expensive, or gym-based. Two sessions per week of gentle, progressive resistance work, with bands, bodyweight, or light weights, is enough to deliver meaningful benefit at any age. The body’s capacity to respond to resistance training never fully disappears, and starting at any point delivers real returns.
If you have been focusing on walking or cardio and have not yet incorporated any resistance work into your routine, this is worth raising with your doctor or physiotherapist. It may be one of the most valuable additions you can make to your heart health program.
