Ca. Slentz et Jo. Holloszy, BODY-COMPOSITION OF PHYSICALLY INACTIVE AND ACTIVE 25-MONTH-OLD FEMALE RATS, Mechanism of ageing and development, 69(3), 1993, pp. 161-166
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of physical acti
vity on the body composition of ageing female rats. Female pathogen-fr
ee Long-Evans rats were housed either in individual 7 x 14 x 8 inch ca
ges or in cages with attached running wheels to which they had free ac
cess. The runners ate significantly more than the sedentary rats. Food
intake from month 10 through month 24 of age averaged 14.6 +/- 0.7 g
for the sedentary group, and 18.3 +/- 2.2 g for the active group. The
body fat content of the sedentary rats was approximately 50% higher, w
hile their lean body mass and protein content were significantly lower
than that of the runners at age 25 months. Total body weight was simi
lar in the active and sedentary groups. Percent body fat and protein o
f the 25-month-old physically active rats were not significantly diffe
rent from that of 9-month-old rats, while the sedentary 25-month-old r
ats had a significantly higher body fat content and a lower body prote
in content than the 9-month-old animals. These results suggest the pos
sibility that the changes in body composition that occur during middle
age in sedentary female rats are largely due to physical inactivity,
and that the lean tissue wasting that occurs as the result of the agin
g process is a late event that occurs closer to the end of life.