Javascript is not enabled.

Javascript must be enabled to use this site. Please enable Javascript in your browser and try again.

Skip to content
Content starts here
CLOSE ×
Search
CLOSE ×
Search
Leaving AARP.org Website

You are now leaving AARP.org and going to a website that is not operated by AARP. A different privacy policy and terms of service will apply.

Surprising Parts of the Body You Need to Exercise Regularly

Your arms, legs and back aren’t the only areas that need attention. Try our new workout with 12 easy moves


spinner image model demonstrating a leg lift move laying on her side on a bed
Michal Venera

A few years ago, I had a pain in my right thigh. I assumed I had pulled a muscle and soldiered on.

Until, that is, it interfered with my playing the bass drum on my drum kit. That’s when I finally saw a physical therapist.

Turns out, the pain wasn’t coming from my thigh. It was stemming from my hip area — more specifically, from my glutes. Only after many sessions with my physical therapist and exercising at home was I back to pounding away on the skins pain-free.

While many people age 50 and older know they need to focus on their arms, legs and back when working out, they are most likely ignoring other parts of their bodies. You probably are, too.

“As we age, we may think we’re active and doing the things to keep us that way,” says Joe Palmer, a doctor of physical therapy, VP and co-owner of Active Life & Sports Physical Therapy in Maryland. Oftentimes, he says, when patients come to his clinics with pain in their lower extremities, it’s because they aren’t keeping their hips strong. “Hip strengthening is where you get the most bang for your buck,” Palmer says. “People who walk slower typically have weaker hips, and that impacts their balance.” He says this is also what’s happening with folks who have trouble getting up from the floor or out of a chair without using their arms.

Let’s Play Pickleball!

Become a part of the country’s fastest growing sport. Learn the rules, tips for playing and ways to win. Plus, how to warm up, what to wear and where to play. 

Read more about the joy of pickleball

When Palmer says “hips,” he’s talking about the gluteal muscles: the gluteus maximus, medius and minimus. “When people have weakness, it’s really in those, the primary hip stabilizers,” he says.

According to Palmer, people also often forget about their core. A strong core, he says, helps you maintain your balance “as you are intentionally trying to reach for something or go outside your base of support.”

Pay attention to your knees

You also need to be strong in other parts of your body if you want to keep active. In your knees, you need to maintain strength, but also flexibility and muscular balance, says Fred Cushner, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City and chief medical officer for Canary Medical.  

“The two main muscle groups to the knee are the quads and the hamstrings. So, when your quads get weak, you might have pain getting from a sitting to a standing position. You may have discomfort with stairs and problems kneeling,” Cushner explains. “With problems in the hamstrings, you get tightness in your hamstrings, but that can also give you some low back pain.”

But you need to keep these muscles strong in the correct manner. “While lunges and squats might be great for your 18-year-old grandson, they’re not great when you have some arthritis, because that puts a lot of force across the knee,” he says. “So it’s not only strengthening, but appropriate strengthening.”

Cushner adds that with knees and other joints, maintaining flexibility is important because it helps prevent injury while also maintaining the balance of the joint.

Keep ankles and feet strong

Now that you’ve worked on your hips and knees, let’s move a little lower.

Strengthening ankles is very important in improving the stability of the ankle, as it relates to overall hip, knee and ankle stabilization, which can highly impact balance,” says Bruce M. Duchemin, a home care physical therapist with Granite VNA in New Hampshire with 46 years of experience in physical therapy. “An unstable ankle can result in loss of balance, twisting the ankle and causing injuries and/or falls.”

It’s also crucial to strengthen the muscles in your feet. “Keeping your feet strong can prevent pain and improve your balance,” says Jasmine Marcus, a doctor of physical therapy at Cayuga Medical Center in Ithaca, New York.  

Avoid a pain in the neck (or wrists)

Believe it or not, neck or cervical exercises are essential “to maintain pain-free neck range of motion and strength, which will translate into preventing the head from moving ahead of the cervical spine’s center of gravity,” says Duchemin. These exercises prevent “common aging issues such as a forward head posture, reversal of the cervical spine curve causing neck pain, and development of a kyphosis,” also referred to as a hunch back, says Duchemin, who says this will cause the head to go forward and the chin to rest on the chest wall rather than being held in a good, upright posture. “These alterations in the cervical spine will change the center of gravity of the upper body, causing the patient to develop balance impairments associated with posture,” which may result in falls, he says.

And don’t overlook your wrists. “It’s important to keep your wrists and your fingers moving, as a way to manage some arthritic symptoms,” Palmer says. 

This type of exercise is key to keeping your independence. “As people age from the 50s to the 60s and beyond into the 80s, the wrists are an important joint to strengthen as it relates to the overall function of the arm,” Duchemin says. “It helps take stress off the shoulder and elbow in the execution of overhead activities.” For example, having strong wrists can help you put things away more easily in an overhead cabinet or support your arms when you push down to get out of a chair.

Remember the next time you head to a fitness center or gym — or your own living room — you need to exercise a lot more than simply the basics.

Note: Always consult your physician, physical therapist, personal trainer and/or another health/fitness expert before beginning a new type of exercise or exercise program.

Exercises to strengthen crucial muscles that are sometimes ignored

Larry Sarjeant, a fitness professional who works with adults age 50 and older on strength and cross training, said it’s crucial that older adults continue to do exercises that increase strength and maintain mobility. “As we age, we lose muscle mass,” Sarjeant says. “The more strength you have, the greater your ability to maintain balance.”

Sarjeant designed the following exercises to work the muscles described in this article. They are meant be done on a bed or workout table, so those who have trouble getting up and down from the floor can do them. He says it’s important to start with small movements and reps and build from there. “Fitness should be a lifelong endeavor. We don’t need to achieve everything today. You want to start off and see what your body can handle and then see how you feel tomorrow. If you are really sore, or let’s say your knees are bothering you, you might have to back off.”

Here is Sarjeant’s workout designed to help strengthen hips, knees, quads, ankles, calves, neck and wrists — all muscles that are crucial for daily movement but sometimes neglected in training.

Depending on your ability, start with eight to 12 repetitions of each of these exercises and build to more repetitions and repeated sets as you get stronger. If you can only do one or two repetitions, start with that. Small improvements over time make a difference.

Talk to your doctor before starting any new exercise regime to make sure it’s safe for you.

Hips

spinner image man demonstrating a laying leg abduction exercise move
Michal Venera

Bed side lying lateral leg abduction

Lie on the bed on your side. Place your arm under your head and neck to support your spine. Place your legs out straight and lift the top leg and then return it back to the center.

spinner image woman demonstrating a bed lying bridge move
Michal Venera

Bed lying bridge

Place your feet close to your bottom. Lift your hips all the way up without going onto your neck. Keep your weight on your shoulders. Then come back down to the bed.

Knees

spinner image man demonstrating hamstring bed lying leg kicks
Michal Venera

Hamstring bed lying leg kicks

Lie prone on your stomach with your elbows underneath your body so that you are slightly arched upward. Bring one leg all the way to your buttocks and then bring it back down to straight. 

Quads

spinner image woman demonstrating seated leg extensions
Michal Venera

Seated leg extensions

Sit on a chair or bed with the back of your knees touching the mattress or chair seat. (Your legs should be touching what you are sitting on.) Extend your leg upward and contract your quadricep. Hold for three seconds and return to the starting position. Alternate legs.

spinner image man showing a sit stand chair sit exercise
Michal Venera

Chair sits

Use a chair. Depending on how much ability you have to bend your knees, you may want some books on the chair. Start by moving your hips backward and then sit down on the chair and stand back up.

Ankles and calves

spinner image lower half of mans body showing how to do standing toe raises holding on to a chair back for balance
Michal Venera

Standing toe raises (plantar flexion)

Stand flat on your feet and raise your heels up as high as you can. Return to starting position. Use a wall or something else to hold for balance.

spinner image lower half of a womans body showing standing toe lift exercise moves while holding on to the back of a chair for balance
Michal Venera

Tibialis anterior (Dorsiflexion)

Hanging onto something like a chair for balance, lift your toes as high as you can, standing on your heels and then return to a flat stance. 

spinner image woman demonstrating foot curls while laying on her back supporting the leg behind the thigh
Michal Venera

Bed lying foot curls

Lie on the bed on your back. Bring one leg to 90 degrees and support with hands behind the hamstring. (Your position should be like sitting in a chair but on your back.) Move your foot in counterclockwise circles and then switch to clockwise. Repeat on the other side.

Neck

spinner image man showing lying neck extension move
Michal Venera

Bed prone lying neck extensions

Lie prone, belly down, with your shoulders on the edge of the bed and your head hanging off the bed. Lift your head back and lift your head back towards your shoulders. Extend your chin on your neck, extend your neck on your thoracic spine, keeping your shoulders on the bed.

spinner image man showing neck flexor move lying on a bed
Michal Venera

Neck flexors

Lie on the bed in a supine position, with belly up. Tuck your chin to your chest and curl your neck up, not letting your shoulders off the bed. 

Wrists

spinner image woman doing a wrist extension curl holding a soup can instead of a dumbbell
Michal Venera

Soup can wrist extensions (palm down)

Place your elbow and forearm on your leg and keep them there throughout the whole exercise. Hold a soup can or light dumbbell in your hand. Extend your wrist upward without lifting your elbow or forearm off your leg. 

spinner image dumbbell wrist curl exercise move performed while seated
Michal Venera

Soup can wrist curls (palm up)

Place your elbow and forearm on your leg with your wrist slightly over your knee and keep them there throughout the exercises. Curl your wrist upward toward your face and then return to the starting position.

Editor's note: This story, originally published Jan. 11, 2022, has been updated to include additional exercises.

Unlock Access to AARP Members Edition

Join AARP to Continue

Already a Member?