Tomlinson David J, Erskine Robert M, Winwood Keith, Morse Christopher Ian, Onambélé Gladys L
Department of Exercise and Sport Science, Institute for Performance Research, Manchester Metropolitan University, Crewe Green Road, Crewe, CW1 5DU, U.K.
Department of Exercise and Sport Science, Institute for Performance Research, Manchester Metropolitan University, Crewe Green Road, Crewe, CW1 5DU, U.K Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, L3 3AF, U.K.
Physiol Rep. 2014 Jun 24;2(6):e12030. doi: 10.14814/phy2.12030.
Obesity has previously been associated with greater muscle strength. Aging, on the other hand, reduces muscle specific force (the force per unit physiological cross-sectional area [PCSA] of muscle). However, neither the effect of obesity on skeletal muscle specific force nor the combined effects of aging and obesity on this parameter are known. This study aimed to describe the interplay between body mass index (BMI)/adiposity, aging, and skeletal muscle specific force. Ninety-four untrained healthy women categorized by age into young (Y; mean ± SD: 25.5 ± 9.0 years) versus old (O; 64.8 ± 7.2 years) were assessed for body composition, gastrocnemius medialis (GM) muscle volume (V), net maximum voluntary contraction (nMVC), and specific force (SF). The young obese, while demonstrating 71% and 29% (P < 0.001) higher V and nMVC compared to normal BMI individuals, were in fact 26% (P = 0.007) weaker than these, where V was used to scale nMVC (i.e., nMVC/V). The weakness associated with obesity was further exemplified in the 34% (P < 0.001) lower SF relative to normal BMI individuals. Similarly, ≥40% body fat was associated with 60% and 27% (P < 0.001) higher V and nMVC, but 11% and 25% (P < 0.01) lower nMVC/V and SF than <40% body fat. The aging-related rates of decline in V (-2 cm(3)/year P < 0.05) and nMVC (-1.2 cm(3)/year P < 0.05) were highest in obesity defined by BMI. This effect was also seen when segregating by >40% adiposity. Interestingly, however, obesity appeared advantageous to the aging-related changes in nMVC/V (P < 0.001) and SF (P < 0.001). Unlike previous reports of greater strength in the obese compared with leaner age-matched counterparts, we in fact demonstrate that the young sedentary obese, are substantially weaker, where the volume of skeletal muscle is used to scale the maximal torque output, or forces are quantified at the fascicular level. The seemingly positive impact of obesity on rate of aging, however, is complex and warrants further investigations.
肥胖症此前一直被认为与更强的肌肉力量有关。另一方面,衰老会降低肌肉比力(每单位肌肉生理横截面积[PCSA]产生的力量)。然而,肥胖对骨骼肌比力的影响以及衰老与肥胖对该参数的综合影响尚不清楚。本研究旨在描述体重指数(BMI)/肥胖、衰老与骨骼肌比力之间的相互作用。对94名未经训练的健康女性进行了评估,她们按年龄分为年轻组(Y;平均±标准差:25.5±9.0岁)和老年组(O;64.8±7.2岁),评估内容包括身体成分、腓肠肌内侧头(GM)肌肉体积(V)、净最大自主收缩(nMVC)和比力(SF)。年轻肥胖女性的V和nMVC分别比正常BMI个体高71%和29%(P<0.001),但实际上,当用V来衡量nMVC(即nMVC/V)时,她们比这些个体弱26%(P = 0.007)。与正常BMI个体相比,肥胖相关的虚弱在SF降低34%(P<0.001)中进一步体现。同样,体脂≥40%与V和nMVC分别高60%和27%(P<0.001)相关,但与体脂<40%相比,nMVC/V和SF分别低11%和25%(P<0.01)。在以BMI定义的肥胖中,与衰老相关的V(-2 cm³/年,P<0.05)和nMVC(-1.2 cm³/年,P<0.05)下降速率最高。按体脂>40%进行分类时也观察到了这种效应。然而,有趣的是,肥胖似乎有利于nMVC/V(P<0.001)和SF(P<0.001)与衰老相关的变化。与之前关于肥胖者比年龄匹配的瘦者力量更强的报道不同,我们实际上证明,年轻久坐的肥胖者在以骨骼肌体积来衡量最大扭矩输出或在肌束水平量化力量时,力量明显较弱。然而,肥胖对衰老速率看似积极的影响是复杂的,值得进一步研究。