To assess age and gender differences in muscle strength, isometric, concentric (Con), and eccentric (Ecc) peak torque was measured in the knee extensors at a slow (0.52 rad/s) and fast (3.14 rad/s) velocity in 654 subjects (346 men and 308 women, aged 20-93 yr) from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging. Regression analysis revealed significant (P < 0.001) age-related reductions in Con and Ecc peak torque for men and women at both velocities, but no differences were observed between the gender groups or velocities. Age explained losses in Con better than Ecc peak torque, accounting for 30% (Con) vs. 19% (Ecc) of the variance in men and 28% (Con) vs. 11% (Ecc) in women. To assess age and gender differences in the ability to store and utilize elastic energy, the stretch-shortening cycle was determined in a subset of subjects (n = 47). The older women (mean age = 70 yr) showed a significantly greater enhancement in the stretch-shortening cycle, compared with men of similar age (P < 0.01) and compared with younger men and women (each P < 0.05). Both men and women showed significant declines in muscle quality for Con peak torque (P < 0.01), but no gender differences were observed. Only the men showed a significant decline in muscle quality (P < 0.001) for Ecc peak torque. Thus both men and women experience age-related losses in isometric, Con, and Ecc knee extensor peak torque; however, age accounted for less of the variance in Ecc peak torque in women, and women tend to better preserve muscle quality with age for Ecc peak torque. In addition, older women have an enhanced capacity to store and utilize elastic energy compared with similarly aged men as well as with younger women and men.
To determine the differences between arm and leg muscle quality (MQ) across the adult life span in men and women, concentric (Con) and eccentric (Ecc) peak torque (PT) were measured in 703 subjects (364 men and 339 women, age range 19-93 yr) and appendicular skeletal muscle mass (MM) was determined in the arm and leg in a subgroup of 502 of these subjects (224 men and 278 women). Regression analysis showed that MQ, defined as PT per unit of MM, was significantly higher in the arm ( approximately 30%) than in the leg across age in both genders (P < 0.01). Arm and leg MQ declined at a similar rate with age in men, whereas leg MQ declined approximately 20% more than arm MQ with increasing age in women (P = 0.01 and P < 0.05 for Con and Ecc PT, respectively). Moreover, the age-associated decrease in arm MQ was steeper in men than in women whether Con or Ecc PT was used (both P < 0.05). Arm MQ as determined by Con PT showed a linear age-related decline in men and women (28 and 20%, respectively, P < 0.001), whereas arm MQ as determined by Ecc PT showed a linear age-related decline in men (25%, P < 0.001) but not in women (not significant). In contrast, both genders exhibited an age-related quadratic decline in leg MQ as determined by Con PT ( approximately 40%) and Ecc PT ( approximately 25%; both P < 0.001), and the rate of decline was similar for men and women. Thus MQ is affected by age and gender, but the magnitude of this effect depends on the muscle group studied and the type of muscle action (Con vs. Ecc) used to assess strength.
Digoxin did not reduce overall mortality, but it reduced the rate of hospitalization both overall and for worsening heart failure. These findings define more precisely the role of digoxin in the management of chronic heart failure.
Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the leading cause of mortality in the United States. The present cohort study was conducted to determine whether rate of FEV1 loss independently predicts CHD mortality in apparently healthy men. White male Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (BLSA) participants without CHD underwent clinical evaluation at 2-yr intervals; 883 had satisfactory pulmonary and lipid studies and returned for a least one visit. Cases were BLSA subjects without CHD on entry who died a "coronary death" (death from acute myocardial infarction, sudden death, or congestive heart failure in the presence of coronary artery disease). Forced expiratory maneuvers followed American Thoracic Society guidelines. Serum cholesterol, blood pressure, cigarette smoking, and body mass index were obtained from the BLSA database. There were 79 CHD deaths and 804 survivors during an average follow-up of 17.4 yr. After adjustment for age, initial FEV1% predicted, smoking status, hypertension, and cholesterol, a time-dependent proportional hazards model showed that cardiac mortality, but not all causes of mortality, generally increased with increasing quintile of FEV1 decline for the entire cohort (relative risk [RR] 2.92-5.13) and separately for the subset of never-smokers. Thus, excess CHD mortality follows a large decline in FEV1, independent of the initial FEV1% predicted, cigarette smoking, and other common CHD risk factors.
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