Article

Live strong and prosper: the importance of skeletal muscle strength for healthy ageing

Details

Citation

McLeod M, Breen L, Hamilton DL & Philp A (2016) Live strong and prosper: the importance of skeletal muscle strength for healthy ageing. Biogerontology, 17 (3), pp. 497-510. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10522-015-9631-7

Abstract
Due to improved health care, diet and infrastructure in developed countries, since 1840 life expectancy has increased by approximately 2years per decade. Accordingly, by 2050, a quarter of Europe’s population will be over 65years, representing a 10% rise in half a century. With this rapid rise comes an increased prevalence of diseases of ageing and associated healthcare expenditure. To address the health consequences of global ageing, research in model systems (worms, flies and mice) has indicated that reducing the rate of organ growth, via reductions in protein synthetic rates, has multi-organ health benefits that collectively lead to improvements in lifespan. In contrast, human pre-clinical, clinical and large cohort prospective studies demonstrate that ageing leads to anabolic (i.e. growth) impairments in skeletal muscle, which in turn leads to reductions in muscle mass and strength, factors directly associated with mortality rates in the elderly. As such, increasing muscle protein synthesis via exercise or protein-based nutrition maintains a strong, healthy muscle mass, which in turn leads to improved health, independence and functionality. The aim of this review is to critique current literature relating to the maintenance of muscle mass across lifespan and discuss whether maintaining or reducing protein synthesis is the most logical approach to support musculoskeletal function and by extension healthy human ageing.

Keywords
Skeletal muscle; Strength; Health; Protein synthesis; Physiology; Protein metabolism

Journal
Biogerontology: Volume 17, Issue 3

StatusPublished
Publication date30/06/2016
Publication date online20/01/2016
Date accepted by journal22/12/2015
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/22905
PublisherSpringer
ISSN1389-5729