Elderly women can increase muscle strength as much as young women can, a new study from the University of New Hampshire finds, indicating that decline in muscle function is less a natural part of the aging process than due to a decline in physical activity.

The research compared strength gains of inactive elderly women and inactive young women after both groups participated in an 8-week training regime. Yet while the two groups increased similar percentages of strength, the older group was far less effective in increasing power, which is more closely related to preventing falls.

"Power is more important than strength for recovery from loss of balance or walking ability," says Dain LaRoche, assistant professor of exercise science at UNH and the lead author of the study. Preventing falls, which occur in 40% of people over 65 and are the top reason for injury-related emergency room visits, is the driving force behind LaRoche’s research agenda.

LaRoche compared the initial strength of 25 young (18 to 33) and 24 old (65 to 84) inactive women, and then had both groups participate in resistance training on a machine that targeted knee extensor muscles, which are critical for walking, stair-climbing, or rising from a chair.

After 8 weeks of training, the older group not only increased their strength by the same percentage as the younger group, they gained strength similar to a control group of young, inactive women. But the older group’s ability to increase power—force over time—was significantly less than the younger group’s; the elderly women saw only a 10% increase in power versus the younger women’s 50% increase.

"It’s somewhat troublesome that these older individuals had a reduced capacity to increase performance that’s so closely associated with falls," LaRoche says. It seems that the key to muscle power in the elderly is to maintain it over the lifespan rather than try to develop it later in life."

Acknowledging that the type or frequency (six sets, three times per week) of his training protocol may have affected the older group’s ability to make gains in power, LaRoche is continuing to research older womens’ capacity to develop muscle power. As baby boomers age, doubling the over-65 population by 2030, research that supports fall prevention and independent living is a growth area.

Of those 40% of elderly people who will fall, research has shown that 20 to 30% suffer injuries that reduce mobility, independence, and longevity. Health care costs for a fall injury total nearly $20,000, and following a hip fracture, life expectancy is just 2 years.

LaRoche’s interest in fall prevention in the elderly arose after helping his parents and sister care for his completely sedentary grandmother, helping her stay in her own home until she died at age 93. She broke both hips, lost 6 inches of height, and had osteoporosis so severe that a caregiver accidently crushed several of her ribs just helping her out of a chair.

"There’s a gap between life expectancy and quality of life in older age," LaRoche says. "We can improve that a lot with physical activity."

[Source: Science Daily]