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Skeletal muscle dysfunction with advancing age

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posted on 2025-11-05, 15:56 authored by Pardeep Pabla, Eleanor JonesEleanor Jones, Mathew Piasecki, Bethan E Phillips
<p dir="ltr">As a result of advances in medical treatments and associated policy over the last century, life expectancy has risen substantially and continues to increase globally. However, the disconnect between lifespan and ‘health span’ (the length of time spent in a healthy, disease-free state) has also increased, with skeletal muscle being a substantial contributor to this. Biological ageing is accompanied by declines in both skeletal muscle mass and function, termed sarcopenia. The mechanisms underpinning sarcopenia are multifactorial and are known to include marked alterations in muscle protein turnover and adaptations to the neural input to muscle. However, to date, the relative contribution of each factor remains largely unexplored. Specifically, muscle protein synthetic responses to key anabolic stimuli are blunted with advancing age, whilst alterations to neural components, spanning from the motor cortex and motoneuron excitability to the neuromuscular junction, may explain the greater magnitude of function losses when compared with mass. The consequences of these losses can be devastating for individuals, their support networks, and healthcare services; with clear detrimental impacts on both clinical (e.g., mortality, frailty, and post-treatment complications) and societal (e.g., independence maintenance) outcomes. Whether declines in muscle quantity and quality are an inevitable component of ageing remains to be completely understood. Nevertheless, strategies to mitigate these declines are of vital importance to improve the health span of older adults. This review aims to provide an overview of the declines in skeletal muscle mass and function with advancing age, describes the wide-ranging implications of these declines, and finally suggests strategies to mitigate them, including the merits of emerging pharmaceutical agents.</p>

Funding

Exercise prehabilitation in colorectal cancer: establishing mechanisms of adaptation to advance optimisation and stratification.

Medical Research Council

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Centre for Musculoskeletal Ageing Research

Medical Research Council

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MRC IAA 2021 University of Nottingham

Medical Research Council

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History

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School

  • Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences

Published in

Clinical Science

Volume

138

Issue

14

Pages

863 - 882

Publisher

Portland Press Ltd.

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© The Author(s)

Publisher statement

This is an open access article published by Portland Press Limited on behalf of the Biochemical Society and distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC BY) - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.en.

Acceptance date

2024-06-20

Publication date

2024-07-12

Copyright date

2024

ISSN

0143-5221

eISSN

1470-8736

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Eleanor Jones. Deposit date: 3 November 2025

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