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1.
J Muscle Res Cell Motil ; 43(4): 173-183, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35987933

ABSTRACT

The single freshly skinned muscle fibre technique was used to investigate Ca2+- and Sr2+-activation properties of skeletal muscle fibres from elderly women (66-90 years). Muscle biopsies were obtained from the vastus lateralis muscle. Three populations of muscle fibres were identified according to their specific Sr2+-activation properties: slow-twitch (type I), fast-twitch (type II) and hybrid (type I/II) fibres. All three fibre types were sampled from the biopsies of 66 to 72 years old women, but the muscle biopsies of women older than 80 years yielded only slow-twitch (type I) fibres. The proportion of hybrid fibres in the vastus lateralis muscle of women of circa 70 years of age (24%) was several-fold greater than in the same muscle of adults (< 10%), suggesting that muscle remodelling occurs around this age. There were no differences between the Ca2+- and Sr2+-activation properties of slow-twitch fibres from the two groups of elderly women, but there were differences compared with muscle fibres from young adults with respect to sensitivity to Ca2+, steepness of the activation curves, and characteristics of the fibre-type dependent phenomenon of spontaneous oscillatory contractions (SPOC) (or force oscillations) occurring at submaximal levels of activation. The maximal Ca2+ activated specific force from all the fibres collected from the seven old women use in the present study was significantly lower by 20% than in the same muscle of adults. Taken together these results show there are qualitative and quantitative changes in the activation properties of the contractile apparatus of muscle fibres from the vastus lateralis muscle of women with advancing age, and that these changes need to be considered when explaining observed changes in women's mobility with aging.


Subject(s)
Calcium , Strontium , Young Adult , Humans , Female , Aged , Muscle Contraction/physiology , Muscle Fibers, Skeletal , Aging/physiology , Muscle, Skeletal
2.
Int J Palliat Nurs ; 12(4): 180-2, 2006 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16723963

ABSTRACT

Traditionally nurses have performed the act of laying out of the body of a person following death, referred to here as post-death nursing care. This article provides a reflective account of the experience of expert nurses during post-death care. Over the preceding weeks to a woman's death, two expert nurses had cared for her; she was elderly and had just died from multiple causes including metastatic cancer. The observations of a novice nurse during the post-death care led to the understanding that this final act of caring is not only a procedure, but also has a deeper spiritual dimension that can be modelled and described as a continuation of the depth of care given when the person was alive.


Subject(s)
Attitude to Death , Funeral Rites , Neoplasms/nursing , Spirituality , Aged , Female , Humans , New South Wales , Nursing Staff, Hospital/education
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