Abstract
This review provides a pulmonary-focused description of the age-associated changes in the integrative physiology of exercise, including how declining lung function plays a role in promoting multimorbidity in the elderly through limitation of physical function. We outline the ageing of physiological systems supporting endurance activity: 1) coupling of muscle metabolism to mechanical power output; 2) gas transport between muscle capillary and mitochondria; 3) matching of muscle blood flow to its requirement; 4) oxygen and carbon dioxide carrying capacity of the blood; 5) cardiac output; 6) pulmonary vascular function; 7) pulmonary oxygen transport; 8) control of ventilation; and 9) pulmonary mechanics and respiratory muscle function. Deterioration in function occurs in many of these systems in healthy ageing. Between the ages of 25 and 80 years pulmonary function and aerobic capacity each decline by ∼40%. While the predominant factor limiting exercise in the elderly likely resides within the function of the muscles of ambulation, muscle function is (at least partially) rescued by exercise training. The age-associated decline in pulmonary function, however, is not recovered by training. Thus, loss in pulmonary function may lead to ventilatory limitation in exercise in the active elderly, limiting the ability to accrue the health benefits of physical activity into senescence.
Abstract
Exercise performance depends on integrated organ-system response, each subject to differential age-related decline http://ow.ly/YRNh3022S7w
Footnotes
Previous articles in this series: No. 1: Faner R, Cruz T, López-Giraldo A, et al. Network medicine, multimorbidity and the lung in the elderly. Eur Respir J 2014; 44: 775–788. No. 2: Divo MJ, Martinez CH, Mannino DM. Ageing and the epidemiology of multimorbidity. Eur Respir J 2014; 44: 1055–1068. No. 3: MacNee W, Rabinovich RA, Choudhury G. Ageing and the border between health and disease. Eur Respir J 2014; 44: 1332–1352. No. 4: Carraro S, Scheltema N, Bont L, et al. Early-life origins of chronic respiratory diseases: understanding and promoting healthy ageing. Eur Respir J 2014; 44: 1682–1696. No. 5: Chacko A, Carpenter DO, Callaway L, et al. Early-life risk factors for chronic nonrespiratory diseases. Eur Respir J 2015; 45: 244–259. No. 6: Barnes PJ. Mechanisms of development of multimorbidity in the elderly. Eur Respir J 2015; 45: 790–806. No. 7: Rodriguez-Roisin R, Bartolome SD, Huchon G, et al. Inflammatory bowel diseases, chronic liver diseases and the lung. Eur Respir J 2016; 47: 638–650. No. 8: Spagnolo P, Cordier J-F, Cottin V. Connective tissue diseases, multimorbidity and the ageing lung. Eur Respir J 2016; 47: 1535–1558.
Conflict of interest: None declared.
- Received February 15, 2016.
- Accepted June 27, 2016.
- Copyright ©ERS 2016