| Literature DB >> 28378095 |
Peter Francis1,2, Mark Lyons3, Mathew Piasecki4, Jamie Mc Phee4, Karen Hind5, Philip Jakeman3.
Abstract
Muscle health is a critical component in the struggle against physical frailty and the efforts to maintain metabolic health until the limit of chronological age. Consensus opinion is to evaluate muscle health in terms of muscle mass, strength and functional capability. There has been considerable variability in the components of muscle health which have been investigated in addition to variability in the tools of assessment and protocol for measurement. This is in stark contrast to the validated measurement of bone health across the adult life span. The purpose of this review was to identify indices of muscle mass, strength and functional capability most responsive to change with ageing and where possible to provide an estimate of the rate of change. We suggest lean tissue mass (LTM) or skeletal muscle (SM) is best evaluated from the thigh region due to its greater responsiveness to ageing compared to the whole body. The anterior compartment of the thigh region undergoes a preferential age-related decline in SM and force generating capacity. Therefore, we suggest that knee extensor torque is measured to represent the force generating capacity of the thigh and subsequently, to express muscle quality (strength per unit tissue). Finally, we suggest measures of functional capability which allow participants perform to a greater maximum are most appropriate to track age-related difference in functional capacity across the adult lifespan. This is due to their ability encompass a broad spectrum of abilities. This review suggests indices of muscular health for which reference ranges can be generated across the lifespan.Entities:
Keywords: Functional capability; Healthy aging; Muscle strength; Sarcopenia
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28378095 PMCID: PMC5684284 DOI: 10.1007/s10522-017-9697-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biogerontology ISSN: 1389-5729 Impact factor: 4.277
Fig. 1Upper leg lean tissue mass (iDXA; University of Limerick Body Composition Study) and quadriceps skeletal mass (MRI; Manchester Metropolitan Healthy Ageing Study), knee extensor torque (isokinetic dynamometry; University of Limerick Healthy Ageing Study), extended chair rise and gait speed tests (University of Limerick Healthy Ageing Study) appear to represent the indices of lower extremity muscle mass, strength and function responsive to age-related change and therapeutic intervention