Age-related sarcopenia is associated with increased morbidity, mortality, disability and reduced resistance to metabolic stress. The aim of this study is to assess the effects of resistance training, associated or not with oral nutritional supplements, on skeletal muscle mass in sarcopenic subjects. This is a prospective randomised controlled single-centre study that will last two years, three months for a participant. 200 healthy elderly (70-80 years old) subjects will be screened for sarcopenia by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry. 128 sarcopenic subjects will be randomized into 4 groups: * group 1: controls * group 2: oral nutritional supplement (260 kcal and 20 g protein per day) * group 3: resistance training (3 times per week) * group 4: oral nutritional supplement + resistance training Every subject will be assessed at the beginning and at the end of 12 weeks of intervention on: * muscle mass (DXA) * muscle function (dynamometers) * hormonal (testosterone, GH, IGF-1, cortisol) and inflammatory (IL-6, TNF-alpha) profiles * food intake. Ten subjects in group 4 will undergo a muscle biopsy (quadriceps) before and after the intervention in order to explore protein and mRNA levels of the mTOR pathway, which may be involved in sarcopenia.
Age-related sarcopenia is a common situation defined by muscle mass and function loss in an otherwise healthy elderly person. Epidemiological data from the USA show 49% of men and 72% of women to suffer from sarcopenia. Few data is available on the French population. Sarcopenia is associated with increased morbidity, mortality, disability and reduced resistance to metabolic stress. Resistance training and nutrition are two non-pharmaceutical methods that may be able to prevent several age-related condition. The aim of this study is to assess the effects of resistance training, associated or not with oral nutritional supplements, on skeletal muscle mass (expressed as skeletal muscle mass index) in sarcopenic subjects. This is a prospective randomised controlled single-centre study that will last two years, three months for a participant. 200 healthy elderly (70-80 years old) subjects will be screened for sarcopenia by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry. 128 sarcopenic subjects will be randomized into 4 groups: * group 1: controls * group 2: oral nutritional supplement (260 kcal and 20 g protein per day) * group 3: resistance training (3 times per week) * group 4: oral nutritional supplement + resistance training Every subject will be assessed at the beginning and at the end of 12 weeks of intervention on: * muscle mass (DXA) * muscle function (dynamometers) * hormonal (testosterone, GH, IGF-1, cortisol) and inflammatory (IL-6, TNF-alpha) profiles * food intake. Ten subjects in group 4 will undergo a muscle biopsy (quadriceps) before and after the intervention in order to explore protein and mRNA levels of the mTOR pathway, which may be involved in sarcopenia. We expect to show that sarcopenia can be improved by 12 weeks of resistance training and that this improvement can be potentialized by oral nutritional supplements (with a stimulation of the mTOR pathway), and that oral nutritional supplements alone will affect neither muscle mass nor function.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
2
260kcal and 20g protein per day
3 sessions of resistance training per week
260kcal and 20g protein per day 3 sessions of resistance training per week
Department of gastroenterology, Department of Gerontology
Nice, France
muscle mass (DXA)
Time frame: D0 and after 12 weeks
muscle function (dynamometers), hormonal (testosterone, GH, IGF-1, cortisol) and inflammatory (IL-6, TNF-alpha) profiles, food intake, ± muscle biopsy.
Time frame: D0 and after 12 weeks
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