Role of muscle loss in the age-associated reduction in VO2 max
J. L. Fleg and E. G. Lakatta
Gerontology Research Center, National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, Maryland 21224.
A progressive decline
in maximal O2 consumption (VO2max) expressed traditionally
as per kilogram body weight generally occurs with advancing age. To
investigate the extent to which this decline could be attributable to
the age-associated loss of
metabolically active tissue, i.e., muscle, we measured 24-h urinary
creatinine excretion, an index of muscle mass, in 184 healthy nonobese
volunteers, ages 22-87 yr, from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging who had
achieved a true VO2max during graded treadmill exercise. A positive
correlation was found between VO2max and creatinine excretion in
both men (r = 0.64, P less than 0.001) and women (r = 0.47, P less
than 0.001). As anticipated, VO2max showed a strong negative linear relationship
with age in both men and women. Creatinine excretion also declined
with age in men and women. When VO2max was normalized for creatinine
excretion, the variance in the VO2max decline attributable to age
declined from 60 to 14% in men and from 50 to 8% in women. Thus comparing
the standard age regression of
VO2max per kilogram body weight with that in which VO2max is
normalized per milligram creatinine excretion, the decline in VO2max
between a hypothetical 30 yr old and a 70 yr old was reduced from 39
to 18% in men and from 30 to 14% in women. We conclude that in both
sexes, a large portion of
the age-associated decline in VO2max in non-endurance-trained
individuals is explicable by the loss of muscle mass, which is observed
with advancing age.
Gerontology Research Center, National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, Maryland 21224.
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