What causes sarcopenia?

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    Last Updated: October 25, 2023

    In the case of primary sarcopenia, there is a wide range of factors that contribute to the development of the condition, which are not entirely understood and largely thought to be natural consequences of aging.[1] These include decreased type II muscle fiber size, loss of motor units (i.e., a motor neuron and the muscle fibers it innervates), hormonal changes (i.e., a decline in serum levels of anabolic hormones like testosterone and insulin-like growth factor 1), anorexia (i.e., decreased or loss of appetite), decreased physical activity, anabolic resistance (i.e., a blunted muscle protein synthesis response to dietary protein and resistance exercise), systemic inflammation, insulin resistance, and increased body fat.[2]

    References

    1. ^Andrew D. Ardeljan, Razvan HurezeanuSarcopenia
    2. ^Roger A Fielding, Bruno Vellas, William J Evans, Shalender Bhasin, John E Morley, Anne B Newman, Gabor Abellan van Kan, Sandrine Andrieu, Juergen Bauer, Denis Breuille, Tommy Cederholm, Julie Chandler, Capucine De Meynard, Lorenzo Donini, Tamara Harris, Aimo Kannt, Florence Keime Guibert, Graziano Onder, Dimitris Papanicolaou, Yves Rolland, Daniel Rooks, Cornel Sieber, Elisabeth Souhami, Sjors Verlaan, Mauro ZamboniSarcopenia: an undiagnosed condition in older adults. Current consensus definition: prevalence, etiology, and consequences. International working group on sarcopeniaJ Am Med Dir Assoc.(2011 May)