Livelong Media

Aging with Power with Dr. Vonda Wright

31 min · I går
episode Aging with Power with Dr. Vonda Wright cover

Description

Most longevity conversations focus on muscle, protein, and cardio fitness. But according to orthopedic surgeon and bestselling author Vonda Wright, the real foundation of healthy aging is bone-deep.  In this episode of the Livelong Podcast, Wright introduces the concept of “skeletal longevity”—the idea that bones, muscles, tendons, ligaments, cartilage, and connective tissue work together to determine whether we remain active, independent, and resilient as we age. The conversation explores why mobility is often the gatekeeper to every other longevity habit. After all, it’s hard to build cardiovascular fitness, maintain muscle, or stay socially engaged when knee pain, arthritis, back pain, or injury make movement difficult. Wright explains why bone is far more than a structural tissue, how body composition scans can reveal hidden risks long before symptoms appear, and why our 30s largely establish peak bone density and muscle mass. The discussion also dives into the often-overlooked musculoskeletal effects of perimenopause and menopause, and Wright outlines the negative effects of declining estrogen on joint pain, frozen shoulder, back pain, and more. Perhaps the episode’s most practical takeaway is that stronger bones are built through a combination of habits, not a single intervention. Though aging may be inevitable, frailty is not.

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episode Aging with Power with Dr. Vonda Wright artwork

Aging with Power with Dr. Vonda Wright

Most longevity conversations focus on muscle, protein, and cardio fitness. But according to orthopedic surgeon and bestselling author Vonda Wright, the real foundation of healthy aging is bone-deep.  In this episode of the Livelong Podcast, Wright introduces the concept of “skeletal longevity”—the idea that bones, muscles, tendons, ligaments, cartilage, and connective tissue work together to determine whether we remain active, independent, and resilient as we age. The conversation explores why mobility is often the gatekeeper to every other longevity habit. After all, it’s hard to build cardiovascular fitness, maintain muscle, or stay socially engaged when knee pain, arthritis, back pain, or injury make movement difficult. Wright explains why bone is far more than a structural tissue, how body composition scans can reveal hidden risks long before symptoms appear, and why our 30s largely establish peak bone density and muscle mass. The discussion also dives into the often-overlooked musculoskeletal effects of perimenopause and menopause, and Wright outlines the negative effects of declining estrogen on joint pain, frozen shoulder, back pain, and more. Perhaps the episode’s most practical takeaway is that stronger bones are built through a combination of habits, not a single intervention. Though aging may be inevitable, frailty is not.

Yesterday31 min
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