Sarcopenia, Dynapenia, and the Impact of Advancing Age on Human Skeletal Muscle Size and Strength; a Quantitative Review
Indexed incrossrefdatacitedoajpubmed
Abstract
Changing demographics make it ever more important to understand the modifiable risk factors for disability and loss of independence with advancing age. For more than two decades there has been increasing interest in the role of sarcopenia, the age-related loss of muscle or lean mass, in curtailing active and healthy aging. There is now evidence to suggest that lack of strength, or dynapenia, is a more constant factor in compromised wellbeing in old age and it is apparent that the decline in muscle mass and the decline in strength can take quite different trajectories. This demands recognition of the concept of muscle quality; that is the force generating per capacity per unit cross-sectional area (CSA). An…
Citation impact
1,330
total citations
- FWCI
- 24.58
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 187
Citations per year
Authors
6Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Sarcopenia
- Medicine
- Muscle mass
- Skeletal muscle
- Gerontology
- Population
- Muscle strength
- Ageing
No related works found for this paper.