Muscle wasting in ageing and chronic illness

2015 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Muscle wasting in ageing and chronic illness​
Ebner, N.; Sliziuk, V.; Scherbakov, N. & Sandek, A.​ (2015) 
ESC Heart Failure2(2) pp. 58​-68​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/ehf2.12033 

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Authors
Ebner, Nicole; Sliziuk, Veronika; Scherbakov, Nadja; Sandek, Anja
Abstract
Purpose As life expectancy increases, muscle wasting is becoming a more and more important public health problem. This review summarizes the current knowledge of pathophysiological mechanisms underlying muscle loss in ageing and chronic diseases such as heart failure and discusses evolving interventional strategies. Recent findings Loss of skeletal muscle mass and strength is a common phenomenon in a wide variety of disorders associated with ageing and morbidity-associated catabolic conditions such as chronic heart failure. Muscle wasting in ageing but otherwise healthy human beings is referred to as sarcopenia. Unlike cachexia in advanced stages of chronic heart failure, muscle wasting per se is not necessarily associated with weight loss. In this review, we discuss pathophysiological mechanisms underlying muscle loss in sarcopenia and cachexia, highlight similarities and differences of both conditions, and discuss therapeutic targets and possible treatments, such as exercise training, nutritional support, and drugs. Candidate drugs to treat muscle wasting disease include myostatin antagonists, ghrelin agonists, selective androgen receptor molecules, megestrol acetate, activin receptor antagonists, espindolol, and fast skeletal muscle troponin inhibitors. Summary Present approaches to muscle wasting disease include exercise training, nutritional support, and drugs, although particularly the latter remain currently restricted to clinical studies. Optimizing skeletal muscle mass and function in ageing and chronic illness including heart failure is one of the chapters that are far from finished and gains future potential for new therapeutic interventions to come.
Issue Date
2015
Journal
ESC Heart Failure 
Language
English

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