Studies Link VO₂ Max to Longer Lifespan as Expert Sets 35 and 27 Benchmarks
Updated
Updated · Vogue · Jul 3
Studies Link VO₂ Max to Longer Lifespan as Expert Sets 35 and 27 Benchmarks
2 articles · Updated · Vogue · Jul 3
Summary
Scientific studies tie higher VO₂ max—the body’s maximum oxygen use during intense exercise—to longer lifespan, with Dr. Vicente Mera calling it a mortality-protective factor even beyond BMI in middle-aged men.
VO₂ max reflects aerobic capacity and endurance, and Mera says sedentary behavior pushes it lower while raising aging-related chronic disease risk; former athletes with higher levels also tend to outlive lower-VO₂ max control groups.
35 ml/kg/min for men and 27 for women are the average VO₂ max targets Mera recommends, and most smartwatches, fitness bands and rings can estimate the metric during brisk walking, hiking or running.
150 minutes of moderate aerobic activity or 75 minutes of vigorous exercise a week remains the American Heart Association’s baseline, with running, cycling, swimming, boxing and gym cardio machines among the suggested ways to improve it.
Regular cardio’s payoff extends beyond endurance, with cited research linking physical activity to lower risks of type 2 diabetes, some cancers, falls, fractures and depression, plus better cognition, quality of life and lower mortality.