Postinactivity Exercise Training Improves Sarcopenia Traits in 40-60-Year-Old Women Regardless of Fortified Milk Supplementation.

<p><b>BACKGROUND</b></p><p>The term sarcopenia was introduced to describe the age-related decline in muscle mass, but current definitions also include measures of muscle strength and function. Menopause increases sarcopenia risk and may exacerbate the adverse effects of physical inactivity.

Exercise training is a potent stimulus to restore muscle health, and nutritional supplementation can further improve the outcomes. The purposes of this study were to examine the changes in a set of sarcopenia-related phenotypes induced by a 14-day step-reduction period followed by a 12-week exercise training programme, with or without fortified milk supplementation in healthy 40-60-year-old females, and to determine whether menopausal status interacted with these changes.</p><p><b>METHODS</b></p><p>In this double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized trial, females aged 40-60โ€‰years were evaluated before and after 2โ€‰weeks of reduced activity monitored through pedometer and after a subsequent 12-week exerciseโ€‰+โ€‰nutrition programme with ingestion of a fortified milk product (FMP) or placebo.

Muscle volume (dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry [DXA] and peripheral quantitative computed tomography), handgrip (hydraulic handheld dynamometer), knee extensor and plantar flexor strength (isokinetic dynamometer) and a variety of physical function measures were assessed at all timepoints.</p><p><b>RESULTS</b></p><p>Eighty-three self-reported healthy females (50.7โ€‰ยฑโ€‰5.3โ€‰years; 52 postmenopausal) completed the reduced-activity period, and 67 completed the subsequent exercise trainingโ€‰+โ€‰nutrition phase. At baseline, participants averaged 8323โ€‰ยฑโ€‰3077 daily steps and then decreased to 1876โ€‰ยฑโ€‰729 during the reduced-activity period.

Mean sarcopenia outcomes declined after 2โ€‰weeks of activity restriction, with significant changes (pโ€‰<โ€‰0.05) in shank muscle cross-sectional area (CSA) (67.7โ€‰ยฑโ€‰9.9 to 66.5โ€‰ยฑโ€‰9.9โ€‰cm 2), handgrip strength (25.3โ€‰ยฑโ€‰5.0 to 24.0โ€‰ยฑโ€‰5.3โ€‰kg), knee extensor peak torque (134.7โ€‰ยฑโ€‰36.2 to 122.7โ€‰ยฑโ€‰34.5โ€‰Nm) and stair ascending time (3.6โ€‰ยฑโ€‰0.6 to 3.7โ€‰ยฑโ€‰0.6โ€‰s) and power (367.6โ€‰ยฑโ€‰67.6 to 356.7โ€‰ยฑโ€‰67.7โ€‰W), with no significant timeโ€‰ร—โ€‰menopause interactions (pโ€‰>โ€‰0.05 for all variables). All muscle mass, strength and function outcomes were not only improved after exercise trainingโ€‰+โ€‰nutrition but also significantly increased compared to preintervention baseline (all pโ€‰<โ€‰0.05).

No trainingโ€‰ร—โ€‰menopause or trainingโ€‰ร—โ€‰supplementation interactions were observed for any variable (both pโ€‰>โ€‰0.05).</p><p><b>CONCLUSIONS</b></p><p>Two weeks of step reduction negatively affected muscle mass, strength and physical function in 40-60-year-old females. A 12-week training programme including strength exercises and dietary supplementation not only recovered muscular health but also promoted improvements above the baseline before the physical activity restriction.

Menopause status did not influence changes in response to step reduction or exercise, and the addition of a fortified milk product during the training period did not influence the induced adaptations.</p>

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