肌萎缩
医学
肌电图
体力活动
物理医学与康复
物理疗法
生物标志物
股直肌
心脏病学
内科学
生物化学
化学
作者
Loubna Imrani,Sofiane Boudaoud,Clément Lahaye,Caroline Moreau,Myriam Ghezal,Safa Ben Manaa,Mohamed Doulazmi,Jeremy Laforet,Frédéric Marin,Kiyoka Kinugawa
出处
期刊:The Journals of Gerontology
[Oxford University Press]
日期:2022-07-25
卷期号:78 (1): 25-33
标识
DOI:10.1093/gerona/glac143
摘要
Abstract Sarcopenia is a muscle disease with adverse changes that increase throughout the lifetime but with different chronological scales between individuals. Addressing “early muscle aging” is becoming a critical issue for prevention. Through the CHRONOS study, we demonstrated the ability of the high-density surface electromyography (HD-sEMG), a noninvasive, wireless, portable technology, to detect both healthy muscle aging and accelerated muscle aging related to a sedentary lifestyle, one of the risk factors of sarcopenia. The HD-sEMG signals were analyzed in 91 healthy young, middle-aged, and old subjects (25–75 years) distributed according to their physical activity status (82 active and 9 sedentary; International Physical Activity Questionnaire) and compared with current methods for muscle evaluation, including muscle mass (dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry [DXA], ultrasonography), handgrip strength, and physical performance. The HD-sEMG signals were recorded from the rectus femoris during sit-to-stand trials, and 2 indexes were analyzed: muscular contraction intensity and muscle contraction dynamics. The clinical parameters did not differ significantly across the aging and physical activity levels. Inversely, the HD-sEMG indexes were correlated to age and were different significantly through the age categories of the 82 active subjects. They were significantly different between sedentary subjects aged 45–54 years and active ones at the same age. The HD-sEMG indexes of sedentary subjects were not significantly different from those of older active subjects (≥55 years). The muscle thicknesses evaluated using ultrasonography were significantly different between the 5 age decades but did not show a significant difference with physical activity. The HD-sEMG technique can assess muscle aging and physical inactivity-related “early aging,” outperforming clinical and DXA parameters.
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