| Literature DB >> 26790455 |
Richard M Dodds1, Holly E Syddall2, Rachel Cooper3, Diana Kuh3, Cyrus Cooper4, Avan Aihie Sayer5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: weak grip strength is a key component of sarcopenia and is associated with subsequent disability and mortality. We have recently established life course normative data for grip strength in Great Britain, but it is unclear whether the cut points we derived for weak grip strength are suitable for use in other settings. Our objective was to investigate differences in grip strength by world region using our data as a reference standard.Entities:
Keywords: grip strength; international; old people; sarcopenia; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26790455 PMCID: PMC4776623 DOI: 10.1093/ageing/afv192
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Age Ageing ISSN: 0002-0729 Impact factor: 10.668
Characteristics of included samples, by developed status of region
| Characteristic | Developed status, | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Developing ( | Developed ( | Both ( | |
| Year of publication | |||
| 1985–94 | 2 (11) | 6 (14) | 8 (13) |
| 1995–2004 | 2 (11) | 15 (34) | 17 (27) |
| 2005–14 | 15 (79) | 23 (52) | 38 (60) |
| Sample level | |||
| National | 1 (5) | 6 (14) | 7 (11) |
| Regional | 3 (16) | 10 (23) | 13 (21) |
| Local/facility/NS | 15 (79) | 28 (64) | 43 (68) |
| Sample type | |||
| Sampling frame | 3 (16) | 14 (32) | 17 (27) |
| Convenience/NS | 16 (84) | 30 (68) | 46 (73) |
| Sample sizeb | |||
| Median (IQR) | 435 (120, 1,005) | 514 (270, 1,479) | 498 (225, 1,119) |
| Stage of life course | |||
| Child/adol. ≤18 years | 3 (16) | 11 (25) | 14 (22) |
| Adults all <50 years | 3c (16) | 2 (5) | 5 (8) |
| Adults all ≥50 years | 3 (16) | 9 (20) | 12 (19) |
| Adults, both ages | 8 (42) | 20d (45) | 28 (44) |
| All stages above | 2 (11) | 2 (5) | 4 (6) |
| Dynamometer | |||
| Jamar hydraulic | 8 (42) | 23 (52) | 31 (49) |
| Other—hydraulic | 6 (32) | 12 (27) | 18 (29) |
| Electronic | 3 (16) | 6 (14) | 9 (14) |
| NS | 2 (11) | 3 (7) | 5 (8) |
| Position | |||
| Seated | 10 (53) | 32 (73) | 42 (67) |
| Standing | 6 (32) | 7 (16) | 13 (21) |
| NS | 3 (16) | 5 (11) | 8 (13) |
| Hand(s) described in extracted data | |||
| Right/dominant | 18 (95) | 32 (72) | 50 (79) |
| Non-dominant | 0 (0) | 4 (9) | 4 (6) |
| Both | 1 (5) | 8 (18) | 9 (14) |
| Summary of trials | |||
| Maximum | 11 (58) | 22 (50) | 33 (52) |
| Mean | 6 (32) | 13 (30) | 19 (30) |
| NS | 2 (11) | 9 (20) | 11 (17) |
NS, not specified.
aUnless otherwise specified. Please note all percentages are rounded to the nearest whole percentage point, and hence, the total for each group may not equal 100.
bThis refers to the sample size for the age ranges extracted from each paper. This value is smaller than the sample size provided in papers which had included open-ended age ranges such as 75+ years.
cThe paper by Chatterjee et al. [29] had an age range of 10–49 years, and for the purpose of this table, we classed this as a young adult paper.
dThe paper by Backman et al. [24] had an age range of 17–70 years, and we classed this as adults, both ages.
Figure 1.Country setting of included samples by UN region. The chart shows the country setting of the 63 included samples, grouped by UN region.
Figure 2.Grip strength mean values from included samples, by UN region. Each point represents the mean value of grip strength for each item of normative data, plotted against the mid-point of the age range it relates to. Values from the same sample are connected. Data from developing and developed regions are shown with triangles and circles, respectively. For comparison, the grey curve shows the mean values from our normative data for 12 British studies.
Pooled Z-scores by region status and individual regions
| Classification | Pooled | (95% CI) | Adjusted | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | 63 | −0.09 | (−0.14, −0.04) | – |
| UN region status | ||||
| Developing | 19 | −0.85 | (−0.94, −0.76) | 34.1% |
| Developed | 44 | 0.12 | (0.07, 0.17) | |
| UN world region (with references shown) | ||||
| Developing regions | 36.3% | |||
| Africa [ | 2 | −1.34 | (−1.57, −1.11) | |
| Americas excluding N America [28, 62, 63, 71] | 5 | −0.80 | (−0.97, −0.63) | |
| Asia excluding Japan [ | 12 | −0.74 | (−0.86, −0.62) | |
| Developed regions | ||||
| Australia [46, 47] | 3 | −0.01 | (−0.20, 0.18) | |
| Europe [ | 29 | 0.13 | (0.07, 0.19) | |
| Japan [64, 76] | 2 | −0.13 | (−0.40, 0.14) | |
| Northern America [26, 27, 34, 36, 39–41, 48, 49, 65] | 10 | 0.16 | (0.04, 0.28) | |
Results shown are from separate meta-regression models of all 718 normative data items, with model term(s) those for each classification shown.
aN, number of samples contributing to each subgroup.
bThe Z-score scale is the number of SDs above the equivalent values from our British centiles. Each pooled Z-score (and 95% CI) is from a meta-regression model combining the Z-scores for all the normative data items from the subgroup shown.
cThe adjusted R2 is the proportion of variance between each item of normative data explained by each of the two classifications.