This 92-year-old sprinter has the muscle cells of someone in their 20s
Now into her tenth decade, Emma Maria Mazzenga is breaking track records for her age. Scientists want to know how she does it.
By Teddy Amenabar and Stefano Pitrelli
Emma Maria Mazzenga, in training in her home city of Padua, Italy.Credit: Claudia Gori / The Washington Post
Emma Maria Mazzenga likes to win. She once dislocated her shoulder during a race in Germany in 2012 when she threw herself ahead of a competitor at the finish line. âThe woman next to me was about to overtake me,â said Mazzenga, who ended up winning the race. She was then 79.
Now 92, Mazzenga, who lives in Padua, Italy, is running out of competition. At 155 centimetres tall, sheâs an elite sprinter with four age-group world records to her name â and very few opponents to race against.
âIn Italy, itâs just me,â she said in Italian over the phone in July. âAt the world championships, it was me and an American.â
Ninety-two-year-old Emma Maria Mazzenga is breaking records for her age category in athletics.Credit: Claudia Gori / The Washington Post
Last year, Mazzenga broke the outdoor 200-metre world record for women over 90 in a time of 51.47 seconds. A month later, she beat her record by a second. In both events, she was racing against herself.
âSports have given me so much. Iâd say itâs been a lifesaver. I donât like getting by â just waiting for dusk to fall. I need actionâ.
Emma Maria Mazzenga
Scientists in Italy and the US are now studying Mazzengaâs muscles, nerves and even her mitochondria â the powerhouse of the cell â to better understand how sheâs able to keep running into her 90s.
By some measures, Mazzenga appears to have the cardiorespiratory fitness of someone in their 50s and her musclesâ mitochondria function as well as those of a healthy 20-year-old, the researchers said.
The international case study of Mazzengaâs physical fitness is part of a broader, years-long effort by researchers in Italy to better understand how muscles change as we age.
Marta Colosio, a postdoctoral fellow at Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and the first author of the case study, said she had not been able to find a 90-year-old who could compare to Mazzenga.
âSheâs ageing,â Colosio said. âBut she can do things that, at 92, people canât do.â
âThe perfect subjectâ
Mazzenga said âall hell broke looseâ when she broke the indoor 200-metre world record for her age group last January in a time of 54.47.
âI ended up in the newspapers â something which had never happened before,â she said.
Mazzenga pictured in training in Padua, Italy.Credit: Claudia Gori / The Washington Post
Simone Porcelli, a co-lead of the study and an associate professor of human physiology at the University of Pavia in Italy, was one of many Italians who saw the news of Mazzengaâs world record. He was in the middle of co-ordinating a longitudinal study measuring the physical function of more than 100 middle-aged and older adults in Italy. And Mazzenga was âthe perfect subject for our projectâ, he said.
By studying elite older athletes, researchers are able to learn more about whatâs possible as we age, said Chris Sundberg, a co-lead of the study on Mazzenga and the director of the Integrative Muscle Physiology & Energetics Laboratory at Marquette University.
Mazzenga is a retired high school science teacher who still subscribes to scientific journals. So, when Porcelli reached out, she was happy to participate. One morning last spring, Porcelli drove 2œ hours to pick her up for a day of testing at the University of Pavia.
Mazzenga shows photographs of her participating in sporting events.Credit: Claudia Gori / The Washington Post
In the lab, the researchers used a needle to collect a piece of muscle the size of a pencil eraser from Mazzengaâs quadriceps, Sundberg said. And, they flew a sample overnight to Marquette University for testing.
Under a microscope, Mazzengaâs muscle proved to be a mosaic of both the expected and extraordinary. Her fast-twitch muscle fibres, which are associated with speed, resembled those of a healthy 70-year-old â good for her age but not exceptional. She has some normal age-related muscle loss, Colosio said. At 89, Mazzenga ran the indoor 200 metres faster than she does now â a 48.98.
But Mazzengaâs slow-twitch muscle fibres, which are associated with endurance activities, looked like those of a 20-year-old, as did the blood flow and nerve pathways to her muscles.
The researchers put Mazzenga through tests such as cycling and lifting weights to assess her cardiovascular fitness and the strength of her legs. Sheâs particularly effective at delivering oxygen to her muscles, and the mitochondria in her muscle are âwell-preservedâ, Sundberg said.
âEither through genetics or her lifestyle â or a mixture of both â she is able to keep that communication between the brain, between the nerves and the muscle at a much healthier level than what we typically see in a 90-year-old,â Sundberg said. The well-functioning parts of Mazzengaâs muscle appear to be âalmost compensatingâ for her fast-twitch muscle fibres, he said.
Emma Mazzenga visited the University of Pavia in Italy for a day of testing last year.Credit: Courtesy of Simone Porcelli
Colosio presented preliminary findings at conferences in Baltimore and Italy earlier this year, and the researchers are planning to submit three papers for peer review in academic journals.
âWeâre not done studying the muscle,â Sundberg said. âWe have a lot of other experiments in the pipeline to get a true holistic picture of whatâs going on in her muscle.â
âI never spend a whole day indoorsâ
Mazzenga started running track and field at the University of Padua, where she studied biological sciences, when she was 19. She continued racing after graduating from college in 1957, but she stopped after four more years of competition because her mother was sick. Two years later, she got married and had two children.
She didnât return to running until 25 years later, when she was 53.
Emma Maria Mazzengaâs trophies on display at her home in Padua, Italy.Credit: Claudia Gori / The Washington Post
Nowadays, in the summer, Mazzenga trains at Stadio Colbachini, a track in Padua, or on the riverbank near her house. She runs two or three times a week and goes for a walk on her off days.
âI never spend a whole day indoors,â she said.
Her track workouts last about an hour. She starts with a warm-up â some slow running â followed by short stretches of running (about 500 metres). Then, sheâll practise running whatever distance sheâs preparing to race, with rests in between.
Mazzengaâs advice for other older athletes: know your limits, meet your doctor first to make sure youâre fit to start running, then stay consistent â run multiple times a week.
Mazzenga shows off her âlucky vestâ at home in Padua, Italy.Credit: Claudia Gori / The Washington Post
At the height of the coronavirus pandemic, Mazzenga said she ran inside, in a 20-metre-long corridor of her house. Or, sheâd sneak out at night and run around the block.
âSports have given me so much,â Mazzenga said. âIâd say itâs been a lifesaver. I donât like getting by - just waiting for dusk to fall. I need action.â
âItâs never too late to get startedâ
Bas Van Hooren, an assistant professor in nutrition and movement sciences at Maastricht University in the Netherlands, has published three case studies of elite runners in their 70s. And the key to their success has been consistency, he said.
âA lot of the detrimental effects that you see with ageing can be substantially reduced if we just keep those physical activity levels very high,â Van Hooren said.
The good news is, he said: âItâs never too late to get started.â All of the runners heâs studied started training in middle age.
Luigi Ferrucci, the scientific director at the National Institute on Ageing in Baltimore who isnât involved in the study, said the researchersâ findings are âvery, very goodâ but healthy ageing is about more than just muscle.
To stay physically and mentally active later in life, a person needs a holistic approach to nutrition, cognition and exercise, Ferrucci said.
âExercise is a good base, but you need to do a lot more. You need to take care of your entire body.â
Mazzenga said when sheâs training, she eats âwhat [she] generally eatsâ. And, she cooks âvery simple thingsâ such as steak, fish, fried eggs and âa little pasta, a little riceâ. But she avoids eating anything three hours before running.
Mazzenga is now training to race the 100- and 200 metres in September in Catania, Italy. After the competition, she plans to return to the University of Pavia for another day of testing. Then, in November, sheâll start training indoors for the winter season.
âBut, given my age, thatâs not a given,â she added. âI make plans month by month, not beyond that.â
The Washington Post
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