Abstract

Masters athletes maintain high levels of activity into older age and allow an examination of the effects of aging dissociated from the effects of increased sedentary behaviour. Evidence suggests masters athletes are more successful at motor unit remodelling, the reinnervation of denervated fibres acting to preserve muscle fibre number, but little data are available in females. Here we used intramuscular electromyography to demonstrate that motor units sampled from the tibialis anterior show indications of remodelling from middle into older age and which does not differ between males and females. The age-related trajectory of motor unit discharge characteristic differs according to sex, with female athletes progressing to a slower firing pattern that was not observed in males. Our findings indicate motor unit remodelling from middle to older age occurs to a similar extent in male and female athletes, with discharge rates progressively slowing in females only. Motor unit (MU) remodelling acts to minimise loss of muscle fibres following denervation in older age, which may be more successful in masters athletes. Evidence suggests performance and neuromuscular function decline with age in this population, although the majority of studies have focused on males, with little available data on female athletes. Functional assessments of strength, balance and motor control were performed in 30 masters athletes (16 male) aged 44-83years. Intramuscular needle electrodes were used to sample individual motor unit potentials (MUPs) and near-fibre MUPs in the tibialis anterior (TA) during isometric contractions at 25% maximum voluntary contraction, and used to determine discharge characteristics (firing rate, variability) and biomarkers of peripheral MU remodelling (MUP size, complexity, stability). Multilevel mixed-effects linear regression models examined effects of age and sex. All aspects of neuromuscular function deteriorated with age (P<0.05) with no age×sex interactions, although males were stronger (P<0.001). Indicators of MU remodelling also progressively increased with age to a similar extent in both sexes (P<0.05), whilst MU firing rate progressively decreased with age in females (p=0.029), with a non-significant increase in males (p=0.092). Masters athletes exhibit age-related declines in neuromuscular function that are largely equal across males and females. Notably, they also display features of MU remodelling with advancing age, probably acting to reduce muscle fibre loss. The age trajectory of MU firing rate assessed at a single contraction level differed between sexes, which may reflect a greater tendency for females to develop a slower muscle phenotype.

Highlights

  • Master athletes (MAs) provide an attractive model within aging research, offering examination of the effects of aging independent of the commonly observed associated sedentary behaviour (Lazarus & Harridge, 2017)

  • When adjusting for age, maximum voluntary contraction (MVC) was greater in males than females (β = −53.89; 95% CI = −76.14 to −31.64; P < 0.001, Fig. 2A, Table 1)

  • Males performed better than females at 10% MVC only (β = 2.744; 95% CI = 1.126–4.361; p = 0.002, Fig. 3A)

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Summary

Introduction

Master athletes (MAs) provide an attractive model within aging research, offering examination of the effects of aging independent of the commonly observed associated sedentary behaviour (Lazarus & Harridge, 2017). Encompassing recent definitions of sarcopenia (Cruz-Jentoft et al 2019) this potentially avoidable condition is explicable by both the atrophy and loss of individual muscle fibres, and associated motor unit (MU) remodelling (Piasecki et al 2016b; Wilkinson et al 2018), with a multitude of underlying factors. This general musculoskeletal decline with age may contribute to the increased incidence of falls (Yeung et al 2019) and associated co-morbidities (Pacifico et al 2020). As individual fibre power normalised to size appears to improve with age (Grosicki et al 2016), the neural input to muscle warrants greater research interest

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