Elsevier

Ageing Research Reviews

Volume 36, July 2017, Pages 1-10
Ageing Research Reviews

Review
Frailty and sarcopenia: The potential role of an aged immune system

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.arr.2017.01.006Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Clinical and pathophysiological relationships in sarcopenia and frailty.

  • Inflammaging in sarcopenia and frailty.

  • Physical inactivity in sarcopenia and frailty.

  • Reduced neutrophil migration and inflammation.

Abstract

Frailty is a common negative consequence of ageing. Sarcopenia, the syndrome of loss of muscle mass, quality and strength, is more common in older adults and has been considered a precursor syndrome or the physical manifestation of frailty. The pathophysiology of both syndromes is incompletely described with multiple causes, inter-relationships and complex pathways proposed. Age-associated changes to the immune system (both immunesenescence, the decline in immune function with ageing, and inflammageing, a state of chronic inflammation) have been suggested as contributors to sarcopenia and frailty but a direct causative role remains to be established. Frailty, sarcopenia and immunesenescence are commonly described in older adults but are not ubiquitous to ageing. There is evidence that all three conditions are reversible and all three appear to share common inflammatory drivers. It is unclear whether frailty, sarcopenia and immunesenescence are separate entities that co-occur due to coincidental or potentially confounding factors, or whether they are more intimately linked by the same underlying cellular mechanisms. This review explores these possibilities focusing on innate immunity, and in particular associations with neutrophil dysfunction, inflammation and known mechanisms described to date. Furthermore, we consider whether the age-related decline in immune cell function (such as neutrophil migration), increased inflammation and the dysregulation of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)-Akt pathway in neutrophils could contribute pathogenically to sarcopenia and frailty.

Keywords

Immunesenescence
Inflammaging
Frailty
Sarcopenia
Neutrophil
Inactivity

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