4.5 Review

Impact of exercise training on muscle mitochondria modifications in older adults: a systematic review of randomized controlled trials

Journal

AGING CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 34, Issue 7, Pages 1495-1510

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s40520-021-02073-w

Keywords

Aging; Mitochondria; Muscle; Elderly; Physical exercise; Precision medicine; Quality of life; Rehabilitation

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Exercise has positive effects on the repair of muscle mitochondria in older adults, with different exercise modalities showing varying degrees of improvement. Resistance training appears to be the most studied and effective exercise modality for improving mitochondrial density and dynamics.
Background Previous evidence showed that cellular aging is a multifactorial process that is associated with decline in mitochondrial function. Physical exercise has been proposed as an effective and safe therapeutical intervention to improve the mitochondria network in the adult myocytes. Aims The aim of this systematic review of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) was to assess the exercise-induced muscle mitochondria modifications in older adults, underlining the differences related to different exercise modalities. Methods On November 28th, 2021, five databases (PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, Cochrane, and PEDro) were systematically searched for RCTs to include articles with: healthy older people as participants; physical exercise (endurance training (ET), resistance training (RT), and combined training (CT)) as intervention; other different exercise modalities or physical inactivity as comparator; mitochondrial modifications (quality, density and dynamics, oxidative, and antioxidant capacity) as outcomes. The quality assessment was performed according to the PEDro scale; the bias risk was evaluated by Cochrane risk-of-bias assessment tool. Results Out of 2940 records, 6 studies were included (2 assessing ET, 2 RT, 1 CT, and 1 both ET and RT). Taken together, 164 elderly subjects were included in the present systematic review. Significant positive effects were reported in terms of mitochondrial quality, density, dynamics, oxidative and antioxidant capacity, even though with different degrees according to the exercise type. The quality assessment reported one good-quality study, whereas the other five studies had a fair quality. Discussion The overall low quality of the studies on this topic indicate that further research is needed. Conclusion RT seems to be the most studied physical exercise modality improving mitochondrial density and dynamics, while ET have been related to mitochondrial antioxidant capacity improvements. However, these exercise-induced specific effects should be better explored in older people.

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