- not enough protein intake
- low physical activity (especially resistance training)
- reduced vitamin D levels
- chronic illness or inflammation
- overall low calorie intake
What actually helps preserve muscle
If you want the real “anti-muscle-loss” formula, it’s a combination:
1. Enough protein (most important dietary factor)
Older adults generally need more protein than they think—often spread across the day.
Good sources include:
- eggs
- chicken, fish
- dairy (milk, yogurt)
- lentils, beans
2. Strength/resistance exercise
Even light weight training or resistance bands is more effective than any single food for maintaining muscle.
3. Vitamin D + sunlight
Low vitamin D is common and can contribute to weakness.
4. Overall calories
Undereating (very common in older age) accelerates muscle loss.
Bottom line
No single food stops muscle loss. Claims like “THIS one food” are marketing tricks. Muscle preservation is a lifestyle pattern, not a secret ingredient.
If you want, tell me age range or diet type, and I can suggest a simple daily meal + exercise plan for maintaining muscle.
