Caroline S Vincenty, Gilhyeon Yoon, Kaitlyn Rogers, Masatoshi Naruse, Scott Trappe, Todd A Trappe
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Age-related skeletal muscle atrophy is a muscle group-specific process. Therefore, we were interested in understanding exercise-induced hypertrophy across different muscles in older individuals. This review provides a comprehensive summary of the available information on muscle-specific hypertrophy responses to exercise training with aging (≥60y). In total, 6018 peer-reviewed publications were reviewed for inclusion (e.g., supervised resistance (RE) or aerobic (AE) exercise training; MRI, CT, or ultrasound determined muscle size), resulting in 1417 individuals from 68 studies (RE: n=1254; AE: n=163). Data were divided across age (60-69y, 70-79y, 80-89y, ≥90y) and duration (≤9, 10-14, 15-19, 20-24, ≥25wks), with the majority coming from the sexa- and septuagenarians (n=1335, 94%) and 10-14wks of training (n=806, 57%). The number of muscle groups (RE: 7, AE: 8) and subcomponent muscles (RE: 10, AE: 16) were a low representation of the whole-body musculature, with 79% of the data (n=1113) coming from the quadriceps. The 10-14wk responses showed a range of unique muscle-specific hypertrophy and atrophy (RE: 60-69y: 2-14% across six muscles; 70-79y: 1-12% across nine muscles; AE: 70-79y: -6% to +9% across 22 muscles). The large quadriceps-only resistance exercise training dataset (60-79 yrs) showed that no additional hypertrophy was observed with increased training repetitions (i.e., dose), and that men and women elicited an equivalent hypertrophic training response. The optimal exercise training mode(s) and dose(s) for all of the skeletal muscles of sexa-, septa-, octo-, and nonagenarian women and men is far from being elucidated based on the current scientific literature.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Applied Physiology publishes the highest quality original research and reviews that examine novel adaptive and integrative physiological mechanisms in humans and animals that advance the field. The journal encourages the submission of manuscripts that examine the acute and adaptive responses of various organs, tissues, cells and/or molecular pathways to environmental, physiological and/or pathophysiological stressors. As an applied physiology journal, topics of interest are not limited to a particular organ system. The journal, therefore, considers a wide array of integrative and translational research topics examining the mechanisms involved in disease processes and mitigation strategies, as well as the promotion of health and well-being throughout the lifespan. Priority is given to manuscripts that provide mechanistic insight deemed to exert an impact on the field.