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Biology of Muscle Atrophy and of its Recovery by FES in Aging and Mobility Impairments: Roots and By-Products

There is something in our genome that dictates life expectancy and there is nothing that can be done to avoid this; indeed, there is not yet any record of a person who has cheated death. Our physical prowess can vacillate substantially in our lifetime according to our activity levels and nutritional...

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Autores principales: Carraro, Ugo, Kern, Helmut, Gava, Paolo, Hofer, Christian, Loefler, Stefan, Gargiulo, Paolo, Mosole, Simone, Zampieri, Sandra, Gobbo, Valerio, Ravara, Barbara, Piccione, Francesco, Marcante, Andrea, Baba, Alfonc, Schils, Sheila, Pond, Amber, Gava, Francesco
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PAGEPress Publications, Pavia, Italy 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4748978/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26913160
http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/ejtm.2015.5272
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author Carraro, Ugo
Kern, Helmut
Gava, Paolo
Hofer, Christian
Loefler, Stefan
Gargiulo, Paolo
Mosole, Simone
Zampieri, Sandra
Gobbo, Valerio
Ravara, Barbara
Piccione, Francesco
Marcante, Andrea
Baba, Alfonc
Schils, Sheila
Pond, Amber
Gava, Francesco
author_facet Carraro, Ugo
Kern, Helmut
Gava, Paolo
Hofer, Christian
Loefler, Stefan
Gargiulo, Paolo
Mosole, Simone
Zampieri, Sandra
Gobbo, Valerio
Ravara, Barbara
Piccione, Francesco
Marcante, Andrea
Baba, Alfonc
Schils, Sheila
Pond, Amber
Gava, Francesco
author_sort Carraro, Ugo
collection PubMed
description There is something in our genome that dictates life expectancy and there is nothing that can be done to avoid this; indeed, there is not yet any record of a person who has cheated death. Our physical prowess can vacillate substantially in our lifetime according to our activity levels and nutritional status and we may fight aging, but we will inevitably lose. We have presented strong evidence that the atrophy which accompanies aging is to some extent caused by loss of innervation. We compared muscle biopsies of sedentary seniors to those of life long active seniors, and show that these groups indeed have a different distribution of muscle fiber diameter and fiber type. The senior sportsmen have many more slow fiber-type groupings than the sedentary people which provides strong evidence of denervation-reinnervation events in muscle fibers. It appears that activity maintains the motoneurons and the muscle fibers. Premature or accelerated aging of muscle may occur as the result of many chronic diseases. One extreme case is provided by irreversible damage of the Conus and Cauda Equina, a spinal cord injury (SCI) sequela in which the human leg muscles may be completely and permanently disconnected from the nervous system with the almost complete disappearance of muscle fibers within 3-5 years from SCI. In cases of this extreme example of muscle degeneration, we have used 2D Muscle Color CT to gather data supporting the idea that electrical stimulation of denervated muscles can retain and even regain muscle. We show here that, if people are compliant, atrophy can be reversed. A further example of activity-related muscle adaptation is provided by the fact that mitochondrial distribution and density are significantly changed by functional electrical stimulation in horse muscle biopsies relative to those not receiving treatment. All together, the data indicate that FES is a good way to modify behaviors of muscle fibers by increasing the contraction load per day. Indeed, it should be possible to defer the muscle decline that occurs in aging people and in those who have become unable to participate in physical activities. Thus, FES should be considered for use in rehabilitation centers, nursing facilities and in critical care units when patients are completely inactive even for short periods of time.
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spelling pubmed-47489782016-02-24 Biology of Muscle Atrophy and of its Recovery by FES in Aging and Mobility Impairments: Roots and By-Products Carraro, Ugo Kern, Helmut Gava, Paolo Hofer, Christian Loefler, Stefan Gargiulo, Paolo Mosole, Simone Zampieri, Sandra Gobbo, Valerio Ravara, Barbara Piccione, Francesco Marcante, Andrea Baba, Alfonc Schils, Sheila Pond, Amber Gava, Francesco Eur J Transl Myol Review There is something in our genome that dictates life expectancy and there is nothing that can be done to avoid this; indeed, there is not yet any record of a person who has cheated death. Our physical prowess can vacillate substantially in our lifetime according to our activity levels and nutritional status and we may fight aging, but we will inevitably lose. We have presented strong evidence that the atrophy which accompanies aging is to some extent caused by loss of innervation. We compared muscle biopsies of sedentary seniors to those of life long active seniors, and show that these groups indeed have a different distribution of muscle fiber diameter and fiber type. The senior sportsmen have many more slow fiber-type groupings than the sedentary people which provides strong evidence of denervation-reinnervation events in muscle fibers. It appears that activity maintains the motoneurons and the muscle fibers. Premature or accelerated aging of muscle may occur as the result of many chronic diseases. One extreme case is provided by irreversible damage of the Conus and Cauda Equina, a spinal cord injury (SCI) sequela in which the human leg muscles may be completely and permanently disconnected from the nervous system with the almost complete disappearance of muscle fibers within 3-5 years from SCI. In cases of this extreme example of muscle degeneration, we have used 2D Muscle Color CT to gather data supporting the idea that electrical stimulation of denervated muscles can retain and even regain muscle. We show here that, if people are compliant, atrophy can be reversed. A further example of activity-related muscle adaptation is provided by the fact that mitochondrial distribution and density are significantly changed by functional electrical stimulation in horse muscle biopsies relative to those not receiving treatment. All together, the data indicate that FES is a good way to modify behaviors of muscle fibers by increasing the contraction load per day. Indeed, it should be possible to defer the muscle decline that occurs in aging people and in those who have become unable to participate in physical activities. Thus, FES should be considered for use in rehabilitation centers, nursing facilities and in critical care units when patients are completely inactive even for short periods of time. PAGEPress Publications, Pavia, Italy 2015-08-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4748978/ /pubmed/26913160 http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/ejtm.2015.5272 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License (by-nc 3.0) which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.
spellingShingle Review
Carraro, Ugo
Kern, Helmut
Gava, Paolo
Hofer, Christian
Loefler, Stefan
Gargiulo, Paolo
Mosole, Simone
Zampieri, Sandra
Gobbo, Valerio
Ravara, Barbara
Piccione, Francesco
Marcante, Andrea
Baba, Alfonc
Schils, Sheila
Pond, Amber
Gava, Francesco
Biology of Muscle Atrophy and of its Recovery by FES in Aging and Mobility Impairments: Roots and By-Products
title Biology of Muscle Atrophy and of its Recovery by FES in Aging and Mobility Impairments: Roots and By-Products
title_full Biology of Muscle Atrophy and of its Recovery by FES in Aging and Mobility Impairments: Roots and By-Products
title_fullStr Biology of Muscle Atrophy and of its Recovery by FES in Aging and Mobility Impairments: Roots and By-Products
title_full_unstemmed Biology of Muscle Atrophy and of its Recovery by FES in Aging and Mobility Impairments: Roots and By-Products
title_short Biology of Muscle Atrophy and of its Recovery by FES in Aging and Mobility Impairments: Roots and By-Products
title_sort biology of muscle atrophy and of its recovery by fes in aging and mobility impairments: roots and by-products
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4748978/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26913160
http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/ejtm.2015.5272
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