WHEN MUSCLES BECAME THE CENTRAL THEME OF OLD AGE
Birth Of A Term And A Shift In Scientific Perspective For a long time, ageing was perceived as a monolithic, inevitable process of general decline, with weakness serving merely as its natural backdrop. Yet in the late 1980s, a word entered the medical lexicon that reshaped the focus of gerontology : sarcopenia . First proposed by Irwin Rosenberg, the term literally means “ poverty of flesh .” Suddenly, it became clear that the loss of muscle mass and strength is not a cosmetic flaw or a passive marker of advancing age. It is a formidable process that determines whether a person can rise from a chair, maintain balance, and, ultimately, how many years of autonomous life remain. Muscles ceased to be viewed only as instruments of movement; they emerged as a central metabolic and endocrine organ, orchestrating the ageing of the entire organism. The Dynamometer And Stopwatch As Prophetic Tools Today, the dynamometer and the stopwatch in a geriatrician ’s office carry more weight...