Grip strength, body composition, and mortality
Southampton General Hospital · University of Southampton
Abstract
Several studies in older people have shown that grip strength predicts all-cause mortality. The mechanisms are unclear. Muscle strength declines with age, accompanied by a loss of muscle mass and an increase in fat, but the role that body composition plays in the association between grip strength and mortality has been little explored. We investigated the relation between grip strength, body composition, and cause-specific and total mortality in 800 men and women aged 65 and over.
During 197374 the UK Department of Health and Social Security surveyed random samples of men and women aged 65 and over living in eight areas of Britain to assess the nutritional state of the elderly population. The survey included a clinical examination by a geriatrician who assessed grip strength and anthropometry. We used Cox proportional hazards models to examine mortality over 24 years of follow-up.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 8.71
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 25
Authors
4- CRCatharine R. GaléCorresponding
Southampton General Hospital, University of Southampton
- CMChristopher Martyn
Southampton General Hospital, University of Southampton
- CCCyrus Cooper
University of Southampton, Southampton General Hospital
- AAAvan Aihie Sayer
University of Southampton, Southampton General Hospital
Topics & keywords
- Grip strength
- Muscle strength
- Composition (language)
- Medicine
- Hand strength
- Sarcopenia
- Muscle mass
- Physical medicine and rehabilitation