Gender differences in the association between grip strength and mortality in older adults: results from the KORA-age study
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/10801Dato
2016-11-30Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Arvandi, Marjan; Strasser, Barbara; Meisinger, Christa; Volaklis, Konstantinos; Gothe, Raffaella Matteucci; Siebert, Uwe; Ladwig, Karl Heinz; Grill, Eva; Horsch, Alexander; Laxy, Michael; Peters, Annette; Thorand, BarbaraSammendrag
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.
Methods: Data used in this study derived from the Cooperative Health Research in the Region of Augsburg
(KORA)-Age Study. The present analysis includes 1,066 individuals (mean age 76 ± 11 SD years) followed up over
3 years. Handgrip strength was measured using the Jamar Dynamometer. A Cox proportional hazard model was
used to determine adjusted hazard ratios of mortality with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) for handgrip strength.
Potential confounders (i.e. age, nutritional status, number of prescribed drugs, diseases and level of physical activity)
were pre-selected according to evidence-based information.
Results: During the follow-up period, 56 men (11%) and 39 women (7%) died. Age-adjusted mortality rates per
1,000 person years (95% CI) were 77 (59–106), 24 (13–41) and 14 (7–30) for men and 57 (39–81), 14 (7–27) and 1
(0–19) for women for the first, second and third sex-specific tertile of muscular strength, respectively. Low handgrip
strength was significantly associated with all-cause mortality among older men and women from the general
population after controlling for significant confounders. Hazard ratios (95% CI) comparing the first and second
tertile to the third tertle were 3.33 (1.53–7.22) and 1.42 (0.61-3.28), respectively. Respective hazard ratios (95% CI) for
mortality were higher in women than in men ((5.23 (0.67–40.91) and 2.17 (0.27–17.68) versus 2.36 (0.97–5.75) and 0.
97 (0.36–2.57)).
Conclusions: Grip strength is inversely associated with mortality risk in older adults, and this association is
independent of age, nutritional status, number of prescribed drugs, number of chronic diseases and level of
physical activity. The association between muscular strength and all-cause mortality tended to be stronger in
women. It seems to be particularly important for the weakest to enhance their levels of muscular strength in order
to reduce the risk of dying early.
Beskrivelse
Published version. Source at http://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-016-0381-4. License CC BY 4.0.