Sarcopenia: what it is, symptoms, causes, tests, and what to do

A complete guide to sarcopenia: what it really is, how to recognize it, why it increases with age, and which strategies actually help stop or reverse it.

Aevos Research

Medical Research Team

is a technical word for a very concrete reality: the progressive loss of muscle mass, strength, and physical function.

Many people think it simply means becoming "less toned" with age. In reality, it is much more than that. is one of the main reasons a person shifts from being independent to needing help getting up, carrying groceries, recovering after a fall, or tolerating illness.

In other words, it is not an aesthetic issue. It is a practical longevity issue.

What sarcopenia really is

The modern definition does not stop at losing muscle "on the scale." includes three elements:

  1. Less muscle mass
  2. Less strength
  3. Worse physical function

This is crucial. You can lose muscle for years without noticing, especially if body weight stays stable or even rises because of fat gain. This is the classic case of someone who "is not losing weight" but becomes weaker, slower, and more fragile every year.

That is why strength often matters more than appearance. A weak grip, trouble climbing stairs, or being unable to stand up from a chair without using your arms are more serious signs than most people realize.

If you want the operational side of training, we already have a practical guide on sarcopenia and strength after 50. This article is meant to explain the full picture first.

Why sarcopenia matters so much

Muscle does not just help you move. It is one of the body's major health-regulating organs.

When you have good muscle mass and use it regularly:

  • you manage better
  • you protect bones and joints
  • you tolerate acute illness and hospitalization better
  • you recover faster after injury
  • you reduce the risk of frailty and falls

When muscle drops too far, everything gets harder. Insulin sensitivity worsens, the risk of losing independence rises, and even small events become major problems. A fever, a few weeks in bed, an overly aggressive diet, or a fracture can quickly push an older adult into a downward spiral.

That is why matters so much in longevity medicine: it does not just influence how long you live, but what condition you are in when you get there.

Symptoms and warning signs

rarely arrives with a dramatic alarm bell. Usually it shows up through ordinary signs that people dismiss as "just aging."

The most common are:

  • you feel weaker in daily tasks
  • climbing stairs feels harder
  • getting up from a chair is slower
  • you feel less steady or more afraid of falling
  • you walk more slowly
  • you lose weight or body measurements without trying
  • you tire earlier during workouts or normal activity

One of the best signs is loss of reserve. Things that used to feel easy start taking more effort. Carrying bags, getting off the floor, holding a child, or walking uphill. Function declines before the damage becomes visually obvious.

Why it happens

The short answer is age. The real answer is more complicated.

As the years pass, the body becomes less sensitive to the signals that build muscle. This is often called anabolic resistance. In practice, it means you need more protein, more mechanical tension, and more intentional training to get the same growth signal you got naturally at 25.

But age does not act alone. accelerates especially when these factors stack together:

  1. Sedentary living
    Walking helps, but if you never expose your muscles to progressively harder loads, the body concludes that this tissue is expensive and unnecessary.

  2. Insufficient protein intake
    Many adults, especially after 60, eat less protein than they think. We unpack many common misunderstandings in our article on protein myths.

  3. Chronic illness and inflammation
    , inflammatory disease, long periods of inactivity, and poor sleep all push in the same direction: more breakdown, less recovery.

  4. Aggressive dieting
    Losing weight without strength training and without adequate protein often means losing muscle too. This is a real risk with both DIY dieting and medical weight-loss approaches.

  5. Changes in neural and hormonal signaling
    With age, neuromuscular recruitment, testosterone, estrogen, growth hormone, and other muscle-preserving signals also decline.

Who is at higher risk

Risk clearly rises after age 60, but is not only a geriatric problem.

People at higher risk include:

  • sedentary adults
  • people losing weight quickly
  • anyone who has been inactive for weeks or months
  • people who eat too little because of low appetite or chronic dieting
  • people with diabetes or
  • people recovering from hospitalization
  • women after menopause
  • very thin but weak adults

There is also a more subtle form: sarcopenic obesity. In that case total body weight is normal or high, but muscle mass is too low relative to fat mass. The person does not look "wasted," but functionally and metabolically they are fragile.

How it is actually assessed

The good news is that you do not need to wait for an advanced diagnosis before you start measuring the problem.

The most useful tests are simple:

  1. Grip strength
    This is one of the most practical markers and one of the best correlated with frailty and mortality. We also discuss it in our longevity biomarker guide.

  2. Chair stand test
    How easily can you stand up from a chair several times without using your hands? It is an excellent indicator of lower-body strength.

  3. Gait speed
    Walking slowly is not just "being careful." It can reflect loss of power, balance, and overall function.

  4. Body composition
    Assessing lean mass is much more useful than body weight alone. Even calf circumference can provide a rough clue, but stronger tools are better when available.

  5. Clinical context
    Fall history, hospital stays, unintentional weight loss, poor appetite, and slow recovery help complete the picture.

Blood tests do not diagnose on their own, but they help explain the terrain: vitamin D, inflammation, , insulin, , and hormones can all help explain why you are losing tone and strength. That is why our complete blood-work guide can also be useful.

What actually works

It is worth being very clear here: there is no pill that beats mechanical tension, protein, and consistency.

The highest-yield strategies are these.

1. Resistance training

This is the number one pillar. You do not need bodybuilding, but you do need a stimulus strong enough to tell the body: "we need this muscle."

The goal is not just movement. The goal is force production. If you want the practical structure, read our article on resistance training and then the specific protocol in sarcopenia and strength after 50.

2. Adequate protein

After a certain age, "eating some protein" is not enough. You need an adequate daily intake and a sensible distribution across meals. In many cases the realistic target is higher than what a person eats spontaneously.

If food is not enough, protein supplements can be a convenient tool but not a magic solution. We break down cost and usefulness in our guide to protein supplements.

3. Enough energy intake

Many people try to stay lean by sacrificing muscle. That is a major mistake, especially after 50. Chronic calorie restriction without strength work and protein pushes you directly toward frailty.

4. Sleep and recovery

Muscle is built in response to training, but it is consolidated during recovery. Poor sleep, chronic stress, and unstructured training all reduce the return on your effort.

5. A different strategy as you age

This is where the paradox we explain in mTOR and IGF-1 becomes important. At 30 you can get away with nutritional sloppiness and still maintain muscle. At 70 you usually cannot. The main risk is not becoming "too big." It is becoming too fragile.

What not to do

If you want to avoid , these are the most common mistakes:

  • assuming walking alone is enough
  • dieting without protein and without lifting
  • avoiding resistance training because you are afraid of getting hurt
  • waiting until you are very weak before acting
  • judging the problem only by body weight

The key point is this: is much easier to prevent than to chase once it is advanced.

Bottom line

is the progressive loss of muscle mass, strength, and function. It is common with age, but it is not an unavoidable fate.

If you want to reduce the risk, think in this order:

  1. measure strength and function
  2. train against resistance
  3. eat enough protein
  4. avoid poorly managed weight loss
  5. monitor the biomarkers that worsen recovery and metabolism

The good news is that muscle remains surprisingly trainable even late in life. The human body loses ground quickly when you neglect it, but it still responds well when you give it a clear signal again.

And that is the most encouraging point of all: in longevity, very few things offer a return as high as getting stronger.

If you want to turn theory into action, we can help you build a strength, nutrition, and monitoring plan.

Build your anti-sarcopenia plan

Frequently Asked Questions

It is common, but not inevitable. Age increases the risk, but strength training, adequate protein, good sleep, and monitoring can slow it down or in many cases reverse it.
The most common signs are weakness, trouble climbing stairs, difficulty standing up from a chair, instability, weaker grip, and unintentional weight or circumference loss.
Walking is useful for cardiometabolic health and mobility, but on its own it is not enough. To preserve muscle and strength you need resistance training with progressive overload.
Inviaci le tue domandeI nostri esperti risponderanno entro 24 ore.

Related Articles

External Resources