Associations of Skeletal Muscle Mass, Muscle Fat Infiltration, Mitochondrial Energetics, and Cardiorespiratory Fitness with Liver Fat Among Older Adults

Author:

Igudesman DariaORCID,Mucinski JustineORCID,Harrison Stephanie,Cawthon Peggy M.ORCID,Linge JenniferORCID,Goodpaster Bret H.ORCID,Cummings Steven R.,Hepple Russell T.ORCID,Jurczak Michael J.ORCID,Kritchevsky Stephen B.ORCID,Marcinek David,Coen Paul M.ORCID,Corbin Karen D.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundMuscle mass loss may be associated with liver fat accumulation, yet scientific consensus is lacking and evidence in older adults is scant. It is unclear which muscle characteristics might contribute to this association in older adults.MethodsWe associated comprehensive muscle-related phenotypes including muscle mass normalized to body weight (D3-creatine dilution), muscle fat infiltration (MRI), carbohydrate-supported muscle mitochondrial maximal oxidative phosphorylation (respirometry), and cardiorespiratory fitness (VO2peak) with liver fat among older adults. Linear regression models adjusted for age, gender, technician (respirometry only), daily minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity, and prediabetes/diabetes status tested main effects and interactions of each independent variable with waist circumference (high: women—≥88 cm, men—≥102 cm) and gender.ResultsAmong older adults aged 75 (IQR 73, 79 years; 59.8% women), muscle mass and liver fat were not associated overall but were positively associated among participants with a high waist circumference (β: 25.2; 95%CI 11.7, 40.4;p=.0002; N=362). Muscle fat infiltration and liver fat were positively associated (β: 15.2; 95%CI 6.8, 24.3;p=.0003; N=378). Carbohydrate-supported maximum oxidative phosphorylation and VO2peak (adjusted β: −12.9; 95%CI −20.3, −4.8;p=0.003; N=361) were inversely associated with liver fat; adjustment attenuated the estimate for maximum oxidative phosphorylation although the point estimate remained negative (β: −4.0; 95%CI −11.6, 4.2;p=0.32; N=321).ConclusionsSkeletal muscle-related characteristics are metabolically relevant factors linked to liver fat in older adults. Future research should confirm our results to determine whether trials targeting mechanisms common to liver and muscle fat accumulation are warranted.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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