| Literature DB >> 27903239 |
Marjan Arvandi1, Barbara Strasser2, Christa Meisinger3, Konstantinos Volaklis4, Raffaella Matteucci Gothe1, Uwe Siebert1, Karl-Heinz Ladwig3, Eva Grill5, Alexander Horsch6, Michael Laxy7, Annette Peters3, Barbara Thorand3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Reduced muscular strength in the old age is strongly related to activity impairment and mortality. However, studies evaluating the gender-specific association between muscularity and mortality among older adults are lacking. Thus, the objective of the present study was to examine gender differences in the association between muscular strength and mortality in a prospective population-based cohort study.Entities:
Keywords: Aged; Gender; Physical activity; Survival; Weakness
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27903239 PMCID: PMC5131446 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-016-0381-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Participant characteristics of the KORA-Age Study (2008 – 2011) stratified by gender (n = 1,066)
| Men ( | Women ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum grip strength, kg, median (IQRa) | 35 (10) | 22 (6) |
| Lowb | 28 (6) | 16 (6) |
| Moderate | 36 (2) | 22 (1) |
| High | 44 (8) | 28 (4) |
| Age, years (median (IQR)) | 76 (11) | 76 (11) |
| BMI, kg/m2 (median (IQR)) | 27.9 (5) | 27.9 (6) |
| SCREEN II nutritional status (n (%)) | ||
| ≤ 36 points | 152 (29) | 199 (37) |
| > 36; ≤41 points | 188 (35) | 213 (40) |
| > 41 points | 190 (36) | 124 (23) |
| Physical activity (n (%)) | ||
| Active | 303 (57) | 260 (48) |
| Inactive | 227 (43) | 276 (52) |
| Number of prescribed drugs (median (IQR)) | 3 (4) | 3 (3) |
| Cancer (n (%)) | 27 (5) | 16 (3) |
| Cardiovascular diseases (n (%)) | 198 (37) | 180 (34) |
| Lung diseases (n (%)) | 60 (11) | 54 (10) |
a IQR interquartile range. bLow: men, ≤30 (kg); women, ≤18 (kg). Moderate: men, >30 (kg) and ≤38 (kg); women, >18 (kg) and ≤24 (kg). High: men, >38 (kg); women, >24 (kg)
Number of deaths and mortality rates in men and women by tertiles of grip strength during the follow-up time in the KORA-Age Study (2008 – 2011)
| Men | Maximum grip strength ≤30 kg | Maximum grip strength >30– < 38 kg | Maximum grip strength >38 kg | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alive (n (%)) | 144 (80%) | 168 (93%) | 162 (96%) | 474 (89%) |
| Dead (n (%)) | 37 (20%) | 12 (7%) | 7 (4%) | 56 (11%) |
| Total | 181 | 180 | 169 | 530 |
| Mortality ratea | 77 (59–106) | 24 (13–41) | 14 (7–30) | 39 (31–51) |
| Women | Maximum grip strength ≤18 kg | Maximum grip strength >18– < 24 kg | Maximum grip strength >24 kg | Total |
| Alive (n (%)) | 162 (85%) | 210 (96%) | 125 (99%) | 497 (93%) |
| Dead (n (%)) | 29 (15%) | 9 (4%) | 1 (1%) | 39 (7%) |
| Total | 191 | 219 | 126 | 536 |
| Mortality ratea | 57 (39–81) | 14 (7–27) | 1 (0–19) | 25 (19–35) |
aper 1,000 person years (95% CI)
Crude and adjusted hazard ratios of all-cause mortality for tertiles of maximum grip strength in the KORA-Age Study (2008 – 2011)
| Grip strength | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men | ||||
| Low | 5.49 (2.45–12.3) | 2.55 (1.04–6.22) | 2.37 (0.97–5.75) | |
| Moderate | 1.66 (0.65–4.21) | 1.12 (0.43–2.91) | 0.97 (0.36–2.57) | |
| High | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
| Women | ||||
| Low | 20.96 (2.56–154) | 7.24 (0.94–56) | 5.23 (0.67–40.9) | |
| Moderate | 5.17 (0.66–40.8) | 2.87 (0.36–23) | 2.17 (0.26–17.7) | |
| High | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
| Total study population | ||||
| Low | 7.20 (3.45–14.99) | 3.11 (1.42–6.85) | 3.33 (1.53–7.22) | |
| Moderate | 1.96 (0.87–4.43) | 1.31 (0.57–3.01) | 1.42 (0.61–3.28) | |
| High | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
Model 1: unadjusted. Model 2: adjusted for age (in the total study population, adjusted for both age and gender). Model 3: further adjusted for age, nutritional status: tertiles 1/2 vs. 3, physical inactivity, number of prescribed drugs, lung diseases, CVD, cancer (in the total study population, also adjusted for gender). Grip strength: low: men ≤30/women ≤18 (kg), moderate: men >30– ≤ 38/women >18– ≤ 24 (kg) and high: men >38/women >24 (kg)
Fig. 1Adjusted Kaplan–Meier survival curves stratified by maximum grip strength tertiles for men and women in the KORA-Age Study (2008 – 2011)