Muscle, Strength & Grip Strength as You Age
For educational purposes only — not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider. For adults 18+.
Muscle and strength quietly decline with age — a process called sarcopenia — and it's one of the biggest threats to staying independent. The good news: it's one of the most reversible, too.
How muscle changes with age, why strength and grip strength predict healthy aging, the roles of resistance training and protein, and how to start safely.
What's inside
- →Sarcopenia explained — age-related muscle loss
- →Why grip strength matters — a health marker
- →Resistance training — the key habit
- →Protein & muscle — getting enough
- →Staying capable — function over looks
- →Starting safely — with your doctor
For educational purposes only
This guide is educational information about longevity and healthy aging — it is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it is not a substitute for care from a qualified doctor. The science of longevity is evolving, and many "biohacks" and anti-aging products are unproven or over-hyped; no supplement or practice has been proven to extend human lifespan, so be cautious of miracle claims. Talk to your doctor before starting fasting, new supplements, or intense regimens — especially if you have a health condition, are pregnant, or take medication — and remember that supplements are not tightly regulated. It does not diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any condition. In a medical emergency, call 911.