ageing and skeletal muscle Flashcards
what 5 ways has medicine extended our life expectancy and how has each done this?
Better sanitation
antibiotics:
- decreased mortality from infectious diseases
pre/postnatal care:
- lowered mortality in childbirth/infant mortality
drugs:
- has made otherwise lethal diseases “chronic” in nature
assist devices:
- compensates for loss of physiological function
what percentage of people ≥ 65 years experience:
- weight loss
- exhaustion
- low energy
- slowness
- weakness
weight loss:
- 17.5%
exhaustion:
- 15.5%
low energy
- 27.0%
slowness
- 43.2%
weakness
- 21.8%
what is the “break” in the link between life expectancy and healthspan?
- life expectancy continues to rise, however parameters of healthspan have stagnated for decades
what are 3 pro-aging factors in rate of ageing
- loss of renewal capacity
- hormonal changes
- Accumulation of damage (e.g reactive oxygen species)
what are 2 examples of loss of renewal capacity as a pro-aging factor?
- loss of stem cells
- shortening of telomeres
what are 5 longevity assurance systems for ageing
- DNA repair
- stress responses
- antioxidant defences
- protein and cell turnover (eg: muscle)
- mitochondrial maintenance
Genome analysis
what are SNPs
changes in genes that does not alter the genetic code of the gene, but might adjust supplementary factors such as shape of the protein made from the gene etc
hormesis
what is hormesis
stimulant that causes harm, but up to a point actually has a positive effect (known as the hormetic zone)
(eg: muscles cause oxidative damage that when in the hormetic zone can induce repair mechanisms to make muscle stronger)
changes in muscle Mass with aging
what percentage of muscle mass is lost from age 20-70
40%
changes in muscle mass with aging
what percentage of muscle mass is lost per decade from age 30-70
6% decline
sarcopenia
define Sarcopenia
age associated loss in muscle mass
fat and collagen infiltration
what 3 things can sarcopenia be associated with other than reduced muscle mass
think fat, death and function
- decreased muscle quality due to fat inflitration
- increased mortality
- functional decline
what are the 3 forms of Fat inflitration
- subfascia
- intermuscular
- intramuscular
ageing muscles: cross-sectional studies
what are 4 conditions/observations in ageing of muscle
- fiber loss via denervation and apoptosis (fewer fibers)
- fiber atrophy [particularly in type II muscle fibres] (smaller fiber cross-sectional area however is reversible)
- lower extremities>upper extremities
e.g: Postural/locomotor muscles waste more than non-postural muscles - rate of loss in males > females