Aging Muscles: 'Hard To Build, Easy To Lose'

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  • P. Bateman
    Vet
    • Mar 2009
    • 1113

    Aging Muscles: 'Hard To Build, Easy To Lose'

    A team of Nottingham researchers has already shown that when older people eat, they cannot make muscle as fast as the young. Now they’ve found that the suppression of muscle breakdown, which also happens during feeding, is blunted with age.

    The scientists and doctors at The University of Nottingham Schools of Graduate Entry Medicine and Biomedical Sciences believe that a ‘double whammy’ affects people aged over 65. However the team think that weight training may “rejuvenate” muscle blood flow and help retain muscle for older people.

    These results may explain the ongoing loss of muscle in older people: when they eat they don’t build enough muscle with the protein in food; also, the insulin (a hormone released during a meal) fails to shut down the muscle breakdown that rises between meals and overnight. Normally, in young people, insulin acts to slow muscle breakdown. Common to these problems may be a failure to deliver nutrients and hormones to muscle because of a poorer blood supply.

    The work has been done by Michael Rennie, Professor of Clinical Physiology, and Dr Emilie Wilkes, and their colleagues at The University of Nottingham. The research was funded by the UK’s Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) as part of ongoing work on age-related muscle wasting and how to lessen that effect.

    Research just published in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition compared one group of people in their late 60s to a group of 25-year-olds, with equal numbers of men and women. Professor Rennie said “We studied our subjects first — before breakfast — and then after giving them a small amount of insulin to raise the hormone to what they would be if they had eaten breakfast, of a bowl of cornflakes or a croissant.”

    “We tagged one of the amino acids (from which proteins are made) so that we could discover how much protein in leg muscle was being broken down. We then compared how much amino acid was delivered to the leg and how much was leaving it, by analysing blood in the two situations.

    “The results were clear. The younger people’s muscles were able to use insulin we gave to stop the muscle breakdown, which had increased during the night. The muscles in the older people could not.”

    “In the course of our tests, we also noticed that the blood flow in the leg was greater in the younger people than the older ones,” added Professor Rennie. “This set us thinking: maybe the rate of supply of nutrients and hormones is lower in the older people? This could explain the wasting we see.”

    Following this up led Beth Phillips, a PhD student working with Professor Rennie, to win the Blue Riband Award for work she presented at the summer meeting of The Physiological Society in Dublin. In her research Beth confirmed the blunting effect of age on leg blood flow after feeding, with and without exercise. The team predicted that weight training would reduce this blunting. “Indeed, she found that three sessions a week over 20 weeks ‘rejuvenated’ the leg blood flow responses of the older people. They became identical to those in the young,” said Professor Rennie.

    “I am extremely pleased with progress,” he said. “Our team is making good headway in finding more and more out about what causes the loss of muscle with age. It looks like we have good clues about how to lessen it with weight training and possibly other ways to increase blood flow.”



    Journal reference:

    Emilie A Wilkes, Anna L Selby, Philip J Atherton, Rekha Patel, Debbie Rankin, Ken Smith, and Michael J Rennie. Blunting of insulin inhibition of proteolysis in legs of older subjects may contribute to age-related sarcopenia. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2009; DOI: 10.3945/ajcn.2009.27543
    “People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.”
  • liftsiron
    Administrator
    • Nov 2003
    • 18443

    #2
    I think that the loss of testosterone in aging males is the major cause of muscle loss. I supplement my T and hold my muscle and continue to gain strength.
    ADMIN/OWNER@Peak-Muscle

    Comment

    • jboldman
      VET
      • Feb 2007
      • 239

      #3
      as usual i agree with lifts and as one of the oldest bbrs here i can attest that you can gain and maintain muscle mass with the simple addition of test (and exercise of course)

      jb
      Admin CuttingEdgeMuscle.com

      Comment

      • swoleman

        #4
        Originally posted by liftsiron
        I think that the loss of testosterone in aging males is the major cause of muscle loss. I supplement my T and hold my muscle and continue to gain strength.
        I def second this testrone or lack there of can be a major problem in the aging process and holding onto muscle!!

        Comment

        • Deacon
          Vet
          • Jan 2005
          • 3686

          #5
          loss of T is the problem - T supplementation is the answer
          Originally Posted by Doink the clown;
          "Every gym has the tard who never gets bigger,never shuts up,and never goes away!"


          "If you say you are not afraid to die either your lying or your a Ghurka,"

          "Amatures built the Ark - professionals built the Titanic."

          Comment

          • swoleman

            #6
            Originally posted by Deacon
            loss of T is the problem - T supplementation is the answer
            Precisely.....

            Comment

            • ajdos

              #7
              Im getting up there and feel every bit of this...wish I could go back to my 20's armed with my experience and what I have learned now.

              Comment

              • bigkarch
                Registered User
                • Sep 2005
                • 1568

                #8
                studies have shown that test in males start declining around late 20's
                The Big HUNGarian


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                • Deacon
                  Vet
                  • Jan 2005
                  • 3686

                  #9
                  actually in my mid 40s now and I am in better shape than ever and so are some other older guys around here - so in some regards you have to be careful with what you believe
                  Originally Posted by Doink the clown;
                  "Every gym has the tard who never gets bigger,never shuts up,and never goes away!"


                  "If you say you are not afraid to die either your lying or your a Ghurka,"

                  "Amatures built the Ark - professionals built the Titanic."

                  Comment

                  • mrhtbd

                    #10
                    .

                    Comment

                    • Deacon
                      Vet
                      • Jan 2005
                      • 3686

                      #11
                      age is more mental than anything
                      Originally Posted by Doink the clown;
                      "Every gym has the tard who never gets bigger,never shuts up,and never goes away!"


                      "If you say you are not afraid to die either your lying or your a Ghurka,"

                      "Amatures built the Ark - professionals built the Titanic."

                      Comment

                      • Lethalius
                        Registered User
                        • Feb 2005
                        • 42

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Deacon
                        age is more mental than anything
                        Most definitely. I fight with thoughts about it all the time, yet I am in the best shape of my life now at 41 with rock hard muscle.

                        Comment

                        • Dawgpound_Hank

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Deacon
                          actually in my mid 40s now and I am in better shape than ever and so are some other older guys around here - so in some regards you have to be careful with what you believe
                          Bravo!

                          Same here bro. In this game, age is your friend MUCH more than most other sports. In BB, most is not even starting to peak until mid 30's...and thats even assuming they had been kicking the iron for 15 years by then at that. Muscle takes time to build. In my mid 40's, I'm bigger than ever...and also stronger on most exercises than in years past.

                          p.s...Let us not forget that Coleman presented THEE most freaky physique to ever step on a stage in 2003.....................at age 40.

                          Comment

                          • MichelleHayden

                            #14
                            Actually the avg males out there are in pretty bad physical shape. I mean i see guys in their low 30's that look like they are in their 40-50's. Dont work out, no sense of diet whatever. I know for sure in older men it is testosterone, and yes the male is at peak at 20 and slowly declines, but if a man isnt into supplementation and diet he will not be holding peak very long. I heard even from birth that your chemical makeup is pre=determined, but i think perhaps you can supersede that if you take care of your body. Most of the avg males tho that arent into fitness like you guys, are really bad off. Thats why you hear of them having heart probs and different kinds of issues. Some are just unlucky tho with bad genetics. Try tell the ave guy that tho, and they arent gonna listen to some girl, lol!

                            Comment

                            • millenium girl
                              Moderator
                              • Apr 2006
                              • 3194

                              #15
                              Great read. I find it really hard to have the same results as I used to years back. I haven't changed the way I eat or the gear that I'm running but I'm getting older. I don't recover the way I used to and I have more aches and pains. It sucks!
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