Acute Sarcopenia: Mechanisms and Management.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the role of neuromuscular electrical stimulation as an intervention for acute sarcopenia in hospitalized older adults.
Results Summary
The study identified neuromuscular electrical stimulation as one of several interventions for managing acute sarcopenia, though specific efficacy data were not detailed. It was grouped with other strategies like early mobilization and nutritional supplementation.
Population
Hospitalized older adults with acute sarcopenia following illness, surgery, trauma, or burns.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
early mobilization | neutral | acute sarcopenia | hospitalized older adults | - | Interventions include | #1 |
resistance exercise | neutral | acute sarcopenia | hospitalized older adults | - | Interventions include | #2 |
neuromuscular electrical stimulation | neutral | acute sarcopenia | hospitalized older adults | - | Interventions include | #3 |
protein supplementation | neutral | acute sarcopenia | hospitalized older adults | - | Interventions include | #4 |
leucine | neutral | acute sarcopenia | hospitalized older adults | - | Interventions include | #5 |
β-hydroxy-β-methyl-butyrate | neutral | acute sarcopenia | hospitalized older adults | - | Interventions include | #6 |
omega-3 fatty acids | neutral | acute sarcopenia | hospitalized older adults | - | Interventions include | #7 |
creatine monohydrate | neutral | acute sarcopenia | hospitalized older adults | - | Interventions include | #8 |
Pharmaceuticals | no change | acute sarcopenia | hospitalized older adults | variable efficacy | show variable efficacy | #9 |
Early and targeted interventions | decrease | acute sarcopenia | hospitalized older adults | - | are crucial to improve outcomes and prevent long-term disability | #10 |
BACKGROUND: Acute sarcopenia refers to the swift decline in muscle function and mass following acute events such as illness, surgery, trauma, or burns that presents significant challenges in hospitalized older adults. METHODS: narrative review to describe the mechanisms and management of acute sarcopenia. RESULTS: The prevalence of acute sarcopenia ranges from 28% to 69%, likely underdiagnosed due to the absence of muscle mass and function assessments in most clinical settings. Systemic inflammation, immune-endocrine dysregulation, and anabolic resistance are identified as key pathophysiological factors. Interventions include early mobilization, resistance exercise, neuromuscular electrical stimulation, and nutritional strategies such as protein supplementation, leucine, β-hydroxy-β-methyl-butyrate, omega-3 fatty acids, and creatine monohydrate. Pharmaceuticals show variable efficacy. CONCLUSIONS: Future research should prioritize serial monitoring of muscle parameters, identification of predictive biomarkers, and the involvement of multidisciplinary teams from hospital admission to address sarcopenia. Early and targeted interventions are crucial to improve outcomes and prevent long-term disability associated with acute sarcopenia.