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Differences in the mass and quality of the quadriceps with age and sex and their relationships with knee extension strength.

Takafumi MizunoYasumoto MatsuiMakiko TomidaYasuo SuzukiYukiko NishitaChikako TangeHiroshi ShimokataShiro ImagamaRei OtsukaHidenori Arai
Published in: Journal of cachexia, sarcopenia and muscle (2021)
All muscle CSAs and CTVs showed downward trends with age (men: P < 0.001 for all; women: vastus medialis CTV, P = 0.004; others, P < 0.001); the intermuscular adipose tissue CSA did not show any trend (men: P = 0.938; women: P = 0.139), although its percentage of the entire quadriceps area showed an upward trend in both sexes (P < 0.001). Men exhibited a quadratic decline in the CSAs for the entire quadriceps area (P = 0.016), total quadriceps muscles (P = 0.021), the vastus medialis (P = 0.010) and vastus lateralis (P = 0.038), and all CTVs (rectus femoris, P = 0.044; others, P < 0.001). Women exhibited a quadratic equation in the CTV for rectus femoris (P = 0.031), but a linear decline in the other variables (P < 0.001 for all). Both the total quadriceps muscles CSA and CTV were significantly associated with KES in both sexes (P < 0.001). For each muscle, the CSAs of the vastus medialis (P < 0.001) and vastus intermedius (P = 0.001) were significantly associated with KES in men, whereas the vastus medialis CSA (P < 0.001), vastus lateralis CSA (P = 0.006), rectus femoris CSA (P = 0.020), and vastus intermedius CTV (P = 0.025) were significantly associated with KES in women CONCLUSIONS: Age-related quadriceps femoris changes in mass and quality differed by sex and the constituent muscles. The constituent muscles contributing to KES differed between men and women. Quadriceps CSA and CTV measurements are useful for objectively assessing age-related and sex-related muscle deterioration and KES.
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