When it comes to healthy aging, we often focus on heart health, cognitive function, and managing chronic conditions. But what if the secret to maintaining independence and vitality as we age has been hiding in plain sight? According to Dr. William Evans, Professor of Human Nutrition at UC Berkeley and pioneer in the field of sarcopenia research, muscle mass might be the most critical factor in determining how well we age.
In a recent conversation with Thrive's Dr. Jared Pelo, Dr. Evans shared groundbreaking insights about why muscle truly is "the currency of aging" and how this knowledge can transform our approach to preventative healthcare.
Sarcopenia‚ a term coined by Dr. Evans himself‚ refers to the age-related loss of muscle mass. While this might sound like a concern only for bodybuilders or athletes, Dr. Evans's decades of research reveal it affects virtually every aspect of health as we age.
"Of all the things that are affected as we grow older, muscle affects everything," Dr. Evans explained. "And it's remarkable to me that so little attention has been paid to it."
This oversight might explain why, despite sarcopenia affecting millions of older adults, many healthcare providers‚ even internal medicine physicians‚ don't recognize the term. Only geriatricians consistently understand its significance.
For years, the difficulty in accurately measuring muscle mass has hampered research and clinical progress in addressing sarcopenia. Traditional methods like DEXA scans measure "fat-free mass" or "lean body mass," which can be misleading.
"Among older people, muscle is only half of fat-free mass," Dr. Evans pointed out. This explains why measurements using these methods often don't correlate strongly with functional outcomes like mobility and fall risk.
The game-changer? Dr. Evans and his colleagues developed the D3 creatine dilution method‚ a non-invasive, accurate way to measure functional muscle mass. This innovative approach involves:
This method has now been validated in thousands of individuals, from premature infants to older adults, and is being incorporated into major longitudinal studies like the Framingham Heart Study.
One of the most practical insights from Dr. Evans's research is the identification of muscle percentage thresholds associated with mobility:
These percentages provide clear targets for maintaining independence. Interestingly, similar thresholds have been observed even in conditions like Duchenne muscular dystrophy, where maintaining a higher percentage of muscle relative to body weight may help preserve walking ability.
As we age, several factors contribute to muscle loss:
"The RDA for protein (0.8g/kg/day) was established in healthy young people and assumed to be the same for older people," Dr. Evans explained. His research shows this amount is insufficient for maintaining muscle in older adults‚ he recommends nearly double this amount.
But the most powerful intervention? Resistance exercise.
"We did a study years ago where we did resistance exercise in 90-year-old people... and in 10 weeks, we were able to triple their strength," Dr. Evans shared. This groundbreaking study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine more than 30 years ago, demonstrated that it's never too late to build strength.
Even more encouraging: resistance exercise makes muscle more efficient at using dietary protein, helping compensate for lower protein intake.
The benefits of maintaining muscle mass extend far beyond strength and mobility:
The emergence of GLP-1 agonists for weight loss has sparked renewed interest in muscle preservation, as weight loss invariably causes some muscle loss, potentially problematic for older adults.
"Many of the drug companies are interested in maybe an agent that will preserve muscle mass," Dr. Evans noted. "I think there'll be a lot of new potential drugs that are being developed in this space."
Meanwhile, Dr. Evans's team is working to make their muscle measurement test available to consumers within the next year, enabling individuals to track their muscle mass and take proactive steps if it falls below optimal levels.
While we await these exciting developments, Dr. Evans's research points to clear actions we can take now:
Dr. Evans's research offers a powerful reminder that muscle truly is "the currency of aging." By prioritizing muscle health through resistance training and proper nutrition, we can maintain independence, metabolic health, and cognitive function as we age‚ aligning perfectly with Thrive's mission to enable optimal health for all.
As preventative healthcare evolves, measuring and maintaining adequate muscle mass may become as routine as checking blood pressure or cholesterol levels. The research is clear: muscle matters, at every age.