Naked Science Forum
Life Sciences => Physiology & Medicine => Topic started by: katieHaylor on 06/04/2018 08:23:51
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Chris asks:
Why do we get slower and weaker, less agile and generally less physically able as we age? I have trained heavily all my life (competitive running, swimming, cycling but also yoga and weights), yet in spite of these efforts I get slower and weaker. Physiologically, what happens to the body that causes this degradation?
What do you think?
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Aging (or senescence) also occurs at the cellular level, when cells cease dividing.
- This is an important mechanism for blocking the uncontrolled growth of cancers
When you are young, lifting weights causes the muscle cells to break; the stem cells divide and the muscle grows.
- When you are old, many cells no longer replicate, so if you kill some muscle cells, they are not replaced as effectively.
- This suggests a transition from active body building when young to maintaining the muscle mass that you have in a healthy state when older
- Keeping up a healthy level of exercise is important; a healthy heart and healthy circulatory system preserves brain function: "What's good for the heart is good for the head!".
See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cellular_senescence
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The older we get, the better we were. Ask any rock musician.