ageing and skeletal muscle Flashcards

1
Q

what 5 ways has medicine extended our life expectancy and how has each done this?

A

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

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2
Q

what percentage of people ≥ 65 years experience:
- weight loss
- exhaustion
- low energy
- slowness
- weakness

A

weight loss:
- 17.5%

exhaustion:
- 15.5%

low energy
- 27.0%

slowness
- 43.2%

weakness
- 21.8%

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3
Q

what is the “break” in the link between life expectancy and healthspan?

A
  • life expectancy continues to rise, however parameters of healthspan have stagnated for decades
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4
Q

what are 3 pro-aging factors in rate of ageing

A
  • loss of renewal capacity
  • hormonal changes
  • Accumulation of damage (e.g reactive oxygen species)
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5
Q

what are 2 examples of loss of renewal capacity as a pro-aging factor?

A
  • loss of stem cells
  • shortening of telomeres
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6
Q

what are 5 longevity assurance systems for ageing

A
  • DNA repair
  • stress responses
  • antioxidant defences
  • protein and cell turnover (eg: muscle)
  • mitochondrial maintenance
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7
Q

Genome analysis

what are SNPs

A

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

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8
Q

hormesis

what is hormesis

A

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)

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9
Q

changes in muscle Mass with aging

what percentage of muscle mass is lost from age 20-70

A

40%

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10
Q

changes in muscle mass with aging

what percentage of muscle mass is lost per decade from age 30-70

A

6% decline

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11
Q

sarcopenia

define Sarcopenia

A

age associated loss in muscle mass

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12
Q

fat and collagen infiltration

what 3 things can sarcopenia be associated with other than reduced muscle mass

think fat, death and function

A
  • decreased muscle quality due to fat inflitration
  • increased mortality
  • functional decline
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13
Q

what are the 3 forms of Fat inflitration

A
  • subfascia
  • intermuscular
  • intramuscular
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14
Q

ageing muscles: cross-sectional studies

what are 4 conditions/observations in ageing of muscle

A
  • 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
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