Sarcopenia is the gradual loss of muscle mass, strength, and function—most common as people age, but it can also happen with inactivity or illness.
Causes of sarcopenia
1. Aging
- Natural decline in muscle-building hormones
- Reduced muscle protein synthesis
2. Physical inactivity
- Sitting or lying down for long periods
- Lack of resistance or strength exercise
3. Poor protein intake
- Not enough dietary protein slows muscle repair
- Common in older adults with low appetite
4. Hormonal changes
- Lower testosterone, growth hormone, and estrogen levels
5. Chronic disease
Conditions like:
- Type 2 Diabetes
- Heart disease
- Chronic kidney disease
- Cancer
can accelerate muscle loss
6. Inflammation and illness
- Long-term inflammation breaks down muscle tissue
7. Malnutrition or vitamin deficiencies
- Low vitamin D or overall calorie intake can contribute
Solutions (what actually works)
1. Strength training (most important)
- Resistance exercises 2–4 times per week
- Bodyweight, bands, or weights
- Even light training helps if consistent
2. Adequate protein intake
- Spread protein across meals
- Common recommendation: ~1.0–1.2 g/kg/day for older adults (varies individually)
- Good sources: eggs, fish, poultry, dairy, legumes
3. Vitamin D and overall nutrition
- Adequate vitamin D supports muscle function
- Balanced diet with enough calories
4. Stay active daily
- Walking, climbing stairs, light movement throughout the day
5. Manage chronic diseases
- Good control of diabetes, heart, or kidney conditions improves muscle preservation
6. Sleep and recovery
- Poor sleep increases muscle breakdown hormones
Bottom line
Sarcopenia is not inevitable “just aging”—it’s largely driven by inactivity + low protein intake + chronic disease. The most powerful intervention is regular resistance exercise combined with sufficient protein intake.
If you want, I can give you a simple beginner home workout plan for reversing muscle loss without gym equipment.
