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Gender differences in the decline in aerobic capacity and its physiological determinants during the later decades of life.
Authors:Edward P Weiss  Robert J Spina  John O Holloszy  Ali A Ehsani
Institution:Department of Internal Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Abstract:We investigated the hemodynamic determinants of the age-associated decline in maximal oxygen uptake (V(O2 max)) and the influence of gender on the decline in V(O2 max) and its determinants in old and very old men and women. Sedentary, 60- to 92-yr-old women (n = 71) and men (n = 29), with no evidence of cardiovascular disease, underwent maximal treadmill exercise tests during which V(O2 max) and maximal cardiac output (Q(max)) were determined. V(O2 max) and age were inversely related in both women (-23 +/- 2 ml.min(-1).yr(-1); P < 0.0001) and men (-57 +/- 5 ml.min(-1).yr(-1); P < 0.0001). The absolute slope of the V(O2 max) vs. age relationship was twofold steeper in men than in women (P < 0.0001). Q(max) was also inversely related to age in a gender-specific manner (women = -87 +/- 25 ml.min(-1).yr(-1), P = 0.0009; men = -215 +/- 50 ml.min(-1).yr(-1), P = 0.0002; P = 0.01 women vs. men). Age-related changes in maximal exercise arteriovenous oxygen content difference (a-vD(O2)) were marginally different (P = 0.08) between women (-0.12 +/- 0.03 ml.dl(-1).yr(-1), P = 0.0003) and men (-0.22 +/- 0.04 ml.dl(-1).yr(-1), P < 0.0001). Age-associated decreases in Q(max) and a-vD(O2) contributed equally to the declines in V(O2 max) in both men and women. In the later stages of life, V(O2 max), Q(max), and a-vD(O2) decrease with age more rapidly in older men than they do in older women. As a result, the gender differences dissipate in the later decades of life. Declines in Q(max) and a-vD(O2) contribute equally to the age-related decrease in V(O2 max) in men and women.
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