Abstract

Improving muscle strength and preventing muscle weakness are important for older adults. The change in strength can be effectively explained by skeletal muscle mass and neural factors. Neural factors are important for older adults because the variation of neural components is greater in older than in young adults, and any decline in strength cannot solely be explained by a decrease in skeletal muscle mass. The purpose of the present study was to investigate whether skeletal muscle mass or motor unit firing properties could explain the change in muscle strength after 1year. Thirty-eight older adults (75.0 ± 4.7years, 156.6 ± 7.7cm, 55.5 ± 9.4kg, 26 women) performed maximum voluntary knee extension and their skeletal muscle mass was measured using a bioimpedance device. During a submaximal contraction task, high-density surface electromyography was recorded and the signals were decomposed into individual motor unit firing. As an index of motor unit firing properties, the slope and y-intercept (MU intercept) were calculated from the regression line between recruitment thresholds and firing rates in each participant. After 1year, their maximum knee extension torque was evaluated again. A stepwise multiple regression linear model with sex and age as covariates indicated that MU intercept was a significant explanation with a negative association for the 1-year change in muscle strength (β = - 0.493, p = 0.004), but not skeletal muscle mass (p = 0.364). The results suggest that neural components might be predictors of increasing and decreasing muscle strength rather than skeletal muscle mass.

Full Text
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