| Literature DB >> 32072217 |
Alexander Kluttig1, Johannes Zschocke2,3, Johannes Haerting2, Axel Schmermund4, Sylvia Gastell5, Karen Steindorf6, Florian Herbolsheimer6, Andrea Hillreiner7, Carmen Jochem7, Sebastian Baumeister8,9, Ole Sprengeler10, Tobias Pischon11,12,13,14, Lina Jaeschke11, Karin B Michels15, Lilian Krist16, Halina Greiser17, Gerhard Schmidt18, Wolfgang Lieb19, Sabina Waniek19, Heiko Becher20, Annika Jagodzinski21,22, Sabine Schipf23, Henry Völzke23,24, Wolfgang Ahrens10,25, Kathrin Günther10, Stefanie Castell26, Yvonne Kemmling26, Nicole Legath27, Klaus Berger27, Thomas Keil16,28,29, Julia Fricke16, Matthias B Schulze30, Markus Loeffler31, Kerstin Wirkner32, Oliver Kuß33, Tamara Schikowski34, Sonja Kalinowski35, Andreas Stang35, Rudolf Kaaks17, Antje Damms Machado17, Michael Hoffmeister36, Barbara Weber37, Claus-Werner Franzke15, Sigrid Thierry38, Anette Peters38, Nadja Kartschmit2, Rafael Mikolajczyk2, Beate Fischer7, Michael Leitzmann7, Mirko Brandes10.
Abstract
Physical fitness is defined as an individual's ability to be physically active. The main components are cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF), muscle strength, and flexibility. Regardless of physical activity level, physical fitness is an important determinant of morbidity and mortality.The aim of the current study was to describe the physical fitness assessment methodology in the German National Cohort (NAKO) and to present initial descriptive results in a subsample of the cohort.In the NAKO, hand grip strength (GS) and CRF as physical fitness components were assessed at baseline using a hand dynamometer and a submaximal bicycle ergometer test, respectively. Maximum oxygen uptake (VO2max) was estimated as a result of the bicycle ergometer test. The results of a total of 99,068 GS measurements and 3094 CRF measurements are based on a data set at halftime of the NAKO baseline survey (age 20-73 years, 47% men).Males showed higher values of physical fitness compared to women (males: GS = 47.8 kg, VO2max = 36.4 ml·min-1 · kg-1; females: GS = 29.9 kg, VO2max = 32.3 ml · min-1 · kg-1). GS declined from the age of 50 onwards, whereas VO2max levels decreased continuously between the age groups of 20-29 and ≥60 years. GS and VO2max showed a linear positive association after adjustment for body weight (males β = 0.21; females β = 0.35).These results indicate that the physical fitness measured in the NAKO are comparable to other population-based studies. Future analyses in this study will focus on examining the independent relations of GS and CRF with risk of morbidity and mortality.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiorespiratory fitness; German National Cohort; Grip strength; Muscle strength; Physical fitness
Year: 2020 PMID: 32072217 DOI: 10.1007/s00103-020-03100-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bundesgesundheitsblatt Gesundheitsforschung Gesundheitsschutz ISSN: 1436-9990 Impact factor: 1.513