After 50, Muscle Becomes More and More Essential
By Dr. Christopher Lepisto
If youâve felt your strength plateauâŠ
If recovery takes longer than it used toâŠ
If youâre doing âeverything rightâ but still feel a lack of stamina or powerâŠ
This isnât just aging. Itâs muscle physiology changing.
After 50, we naturally begin losing muscle massâa process called sarcopenia. It happens gradually, often unnoticed at first. This is too commonly accepted as âthatâs just the way it is.â However, this is unnecessary if you can figure out why your body is changing.
Muscle helps regulate blood sugar, drives insulin sensitivity, supports immune resilience, stabilizes joints and protects bones. In many ways, it acts as metabolic insurance.
The solution to reduced stamina isnât extreme workouts or punishing routines, itâs investigation into why you are struggling to maintain strength. Common reasons are a decline in testosterone (both natural or secondary to medications/health issues), a decrease in the right kind of activity, or a reduced ability for the body to process protein.
Exploring the cause of stamina loss shifts the conversation from âHow can I exercise better?â to a specific plan of âWhy do I have muscle loss and what does my body need?â
Longevity isnât built by accident. Itâs built by protecting the tissues that protect you. If your energy, strength, or body composition feels like itâs shiftingâand youâre not sure whether itâs training, nutrition, hormones, or something deeperâIâm happy to evaluate the full picture with you.