Do elite athletes have an anti-aging secret in their muscles?

Elite runners do not experience the muscle weakening associated with aging as non-athletes do. A new study published in the American Journal of Physiology—Cell Physiology examines if their superb fitness is because their muscles have not aged.

by American Physiological Society via Medical Xpress December 22, 2015

Movement and strength come from the muscle fibers that make up a muscle group contracting and generating tension. Muscle weakening happens when the fibers contract slower and with less force. A team of Canadian researchers hypothesized that the constant physical training of older elite runners preserved their muscle fibers such that the fibers behaved like those of young adults.

Muscle fiber samples were taken from the quadriceps of older elite runners and non-athlete adults in the same age range. “One of the most unique and novel aspects of this study are the exceptional participants,” says lead author Geoff Power of University of Guelph in Canada. “These are individuals in their 80s and 90s who actively compete in the world masters track and field championships. In the study, we had seven world champions, and everyone placed in the top four of their respective events.”

The fibers’ contraction speed and force were compared to fibers from 23-year-old non-athlete adults. Muscle fibers from older non-athletes contracted considerably slower and weaker than fibers from young non-athletes. To the researchers’ surprise, the muscle fibers of masters athletes contracted at a speed and force similar to those of older non-athlete adults, not the young adults. Success in high-performance sports in old age does not appear to be due to maintained contraction capability of the fibers, Power says.

Olga Kotelko is an amazing athlete. She has over 30 world records to her name and has won over 750 gold medals in disciplines, such as indoor sprinting, high jumping, and long jumping.

Olga Kotelko is an amazing athlete. She has over 30 world records to her name and has won over 750 gold medals in disciplines such as indoor sprinting, high jumping, and long jumping.

This study suggests that aging is associated with decreased muscle quality regardless of physical activity status, according to Power. However, other studies have shown that muscle fibers can be arranged in a variety of ways to optimize strength, speed and power of the whole muscle, Power says, so there are many structural ways to compensate for the reduced performance at the fiber level to maintain performance at the whole muscle level.

Researchers from McGill University, University of Calgary and University of Québec at Montréal were also involved in the study. The article Reduction in single muscle fiber rate of force development with aging is not attenuated in world class older masters athletes is published ahead of print in American Journal of Physiology—Cell Physiology.

Source Medical Xpress via American Physiological Society

[mdi-icon name=”book-open” size=”default” color=”black”] References

Reduction in single muscle fiber rate of force development with aging is not attenuated in world class older masters athletes, Power GA, Minozzo FC, Spendiff S, Filion ME, Konokhova Y, Purves-Smith M, Pion C, Aubertln-Leheudre M, Morais JA, Herzog W, Hepple RT, Taivassalo T, Rassier DE. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol. 2015 Dec 2:ajpcell.00289.2015. doi: 10.1152/ajpcell.00289.2015. [Epub ahead of print] Full text, PDF

Motor unit number estimates in masters runners: use it or lose it? Power GA, Dalton BH, Behm DG, Vandervoort AA, Doherty TJ, Rice CL. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2010 Sep;42(9):1644-50. doi: 10.1249/MSS.0b013e3181d6f9e9. Full text, PDF

Also see
Exercise keeps muscles – and you – young University of Guelph
Genotype influences muscle performance Medical Xpress
Exercise Makes Our Muscles Work Better With Age The New York Times
Exercise Is Not the Path to Strong Bones The New York Times

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