Aging of skeletal muscle: a 12-yr longitudinal study

WR Frontera, VA Hughes, RA Fielding… - Journal of applied …, 2000 - journals.physiology.org
Journal of applied physiology, 2000journals.physiology.org
The present study examines age-related changes in skeletal muscle size and function after
12 yr. Twelve healthy sedentary men were studied in 1985–86 (T1) and nine (initial mean
age 65.4±4.2 yr) were reevaluated in 1997–98 (T2). Isokinetic muscle strength of the knee
and elbow extensors and flexors showed losses (P< 0.05) ranging from 20 to 30% at slow
and fast angular velocities. Computerized tomography (n= 7) showed reductions (P< 0.05) in
the cross-sectional area (CSA) of the thigh (12.5%), all thigh muscles (14.7%), quadriceps …
The present study examines age-related changes in skeletal muscle size and function after 12 yr. Twelve healthy sedentary men were studied in 1985–86 (T1) and nine (initial mean age 65.4 ± 4.2 yr) were reevaluated in 1997–98 (T2). Isokinetic muscle strength of the knee and elbow extensors and flexors showed losses (P < 0.05) ranging from 20 to 30% at slow and fast angular velocities. Computerized tomography (n = 7) showed reductions (P < 0.05) in the cross-sectional area (CSA) of the thigh (12.5%), all thigh muscles (14.7%), quadriceps femoris muscle (16.1%), and flexor muscles (14.9%). Analysis of covariance showed that strength at T1 and changes in CSA were independent predictors of strength at T2. Muscle biopsies taken from vastus lateralis muscles (n = 6) showed a reduction in percentage of type I fibers (T1 = 60% vs. T2 = 42%) with no change in mean area in either fiber type. The capillary-to-fiber ratio was significantly lower at T2 (1.39 vs. 1.08; P = 0.043). Our observations suggest that a quantitative loss in muscle CSA is a major contributor to the decrease in muscle strength seen with advancing age and, together with muscle strength at T1, accounts for 90% of the variability in strength at T2.
American Physiological Society