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Losing muscle power as we age: A fat molecule may be a factor in the decline of strength

By Health_Freedoms at Aug. 19, 2015, 7 p.m., 21454 hits

by Julie Flaherty
August 12, 2013

As people get older, fat tissue inevitably takes up residence in their muscles, but some of that fat may be particularly damaging. A small study conducted at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging (HNRCA) suggests that buildup of a fat molecule known as ceramide might play a leading role in muscle deterioration in older adults.

The study enrolled 10 men in their mid-70s and nine men in their early 20s. None was overweight, and none had exercised in six months. The researchers, including first author Donato Rivas, an HNRCA scientist, took muscle biopsies before and after the participants performed a single round of leg exercises to examine how the workout affected muscle growth. Their analysis showed that two types of ceramide molecules were higher in the older men.

“We suspect that the increased storage of ceramide we saw in the older men, exacerbated by the presence of saturated fat, has a part in weakening the anabolic signaling that responds to resistance exercises and helps with the assembly of new muscle,” says Roger Fielding, N93, senior author and director of the HNRCA Nutrition, Exercise Physiology and Sarcopenia Laboratory.

Learning more about ceramide activity through larger, long-term interventional trials may identify a role for dietary or therapeutic drug interventions in treating sarcopenia, an age-related condition of muscle loss and function.

“The deterioration of muscle is compounded by a loss of muscle strength, which really begins to decline around age 50 and appears to be a factor in the visible decrease in mobility people exhibit around age 80,” adds Fielding, who is also a professor at the Friedman School.

Previous research done at Tufts and other institutions suggests that even with limited exercise, older adults can maintain and build some new muscle. “Until there is enough research to develop specific exercise and dietary interventions, staying as physically active as deemed safe by your health-care provider can only benefit aging muscle.”

The results of the study were published in the Journal of Applied Physiology.

Journal reference: Journal of Applied Physiology search and more info website

Provided by Tufts University

http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-08-muscle-power-age-fat-molecule.html

 
Posts [ 2 ] | Last post Aug. 19, 2015, 7 p.m.
#1 - Aug. 15, 2013, 3:20 p.m.
Hans J. Kugler, PhD

The - - scientifically documented numerous times - - cause of losing muscle is VERY basic: it's a lack of exercise, and resistance exercise specifically!
Build, and maintain, or just lean (fat-loss while maintaining, not building) the muscle mass you have, check out posts under “Exercise”, here at the forum:
http://worldhealth.net/forum/thread/99180/build-muscle-as-you-desire-at-an/?page=1#post-99180
For down-to-earth HOW TO, see (e-book) LIFE-LONG HEALTH: learn how to Control your Genes to stay Young with Age. Access first 21 pages at http://www.antiagingforme.org or http://www.drhanskugler.com

#2 - Aug. 19, 2015, 7 p.m.
jbehar

Great topic.

One of the greatest long-term threats to our ability to remain healthy and function independently as one ages is a steady loss of lean muscle mass as we age.

This condition is called sarcopenia.

It can occur as the result of several factors:

Diminishing hormones (e.g., testosterone, IGF-1), diet (not eating enough protein, too little calories, diminished capacity to digest and absorb protein etc.), chronic low-level metabolic acidosis (or an abnormally increased acidity in the body’s fluids) and other lifestyle issues (like no resistance exercise)./

A interesting study posted, but the study is hardly significant with just 19 total people involved.

The one documented scientific solution: resistance exercise, and it does not take much. Addressing diet can also help AFTER implementing Resistance exercise.

Several nutrients such as whey protein, omega-3 fatty acids, carnitine, and the amino acid glutamine (<6 grams daily) have biological effects that may be beneficial in promoting healthy lean muscle mass. Vitamin D has also shown great promise in combating sarcopenia.

Jeff Behar



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— Last Edited by Jeff Behar, MS, MBA, CIH at 2015-08-19 19:05:58 —