Frank-Wilson A W, Farthing J P, Chilibeck P D, Arnold C M, Davison K S, Olszynski W P, Kontulainen S A
College of Kinesiology, University of Saskatchewan, 87 Campus Drive, Saskatoon, SK, S7N5B2, Canada.
School of Physical Therapy, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, Canada.
Osteoporos Int. 2016 Jul;27(7):2231-2240. doi: 10.1007/s00198-016-3514-x. Epub 2016 Feb 15.
Muscle density is a risk factor for fractures in older adults; however, its association with falls is not well described. After adjusting for biologically relevant confounding factors, a unit decrease in muscle density was associated with a 17 % increase in odds of reporting a fall, independent of functional mobility.
Falls are the leading cause of injury, disability, and fractures in older adults. Low muscle density (i.e., caused by muscle adiposity) and functional mobility have been identified as risk factors for incident disability and fractures in older adults; however, it is not known if these are also independently associated with falls. The purpose of this study was to explore the associations of muscle density and functional mobility with fall status.
Cross-sectional observational study of 183 men and women aged 60-98 years. Descriptive data, including a 12-month fall recall, Timed Up and Go (TUG) test performance, lower leg muscle area, and density. Odds ratio (OR) of being a faller were calculated, adjusted for age, sex, body mass index, general health status, diabetes, and comorbidities.
Every mg/cm(3) increase in muscle density (mean 70.2, SD 2.6 mg/cm(3)) independently reduced the odds of being a faller by 19 % (OR 0.81 [95 % CI 0.67 to 0.97]), and every 1 s longer TUG test time (mean 9.8, SD 2.6 s) independently increased the odds by 17 % (OR 1.17 [95 % CI 1.01 to 1.37]). When both muscle density and TUG test time were included in the same model, only age (OR 0.93 [95 % CI 0.87 to 0.99]) and muscle density (OR 0.83 [95 % CI 0.69 to 0.99]) were independently associated with fall status.
Muscle density was associated with fall status, independent of functional mobility. Muscle density may compliment functional mobility tests as a biometric outcome for assessing fall risk in well-functioning older adults.
肌肉密度是老年人骨折的一个风险因素;然而,其与跌倒的关联尚未得到充分描述。在对生物学相关的混杂因素进行调整后,肌肉密度每降低一个单位,报告跌倒的几率就会增加17%,且与功能活动能力无关。
跌倒是老年人受伤、残疾和骨折的主要原因。低肌肉密度(即由肌肉脂肪过多引起)和功能活动能力已被确定为老年人发生残疾和骨折的风险因素;然而,尚不清楚这些因素是否也与跌倒独立相关。本研究的目的是探讨肌肉密度和功能活动能力与跌倒状态的关联。
对183名年龄在60 - 98岁的男性和女性进行横断面观察研究。收集描述性数据,包括12个月内的跌倒回忆、计时起立行走(TUG)测试表现、小腿肌肉面积和密度。计算跌倒者的比值比(OR),并对年龄、性别、体重指数、总体健康状况、糖尿病和合并症进行调整。
肌肉密度每增加1mg/cm³(平均70.2,标准差2.6mg/cm³),独立使跌倒几率降低19%(OR 0.81 [95%置信区间0.67至0.97]),TUG测试时间每延长1秒(平均9.8,标准差2.6秒),独立使几率增加17%(OR 1.17 [95%置信区间1.01至1.37])。当肌肉密度和TUG测试时间纳入同一模型时,只有年龄(OR 0.93 [95%置信区间0.87至0.99])和肌肉密度(OR 0.83 [95%置信区间0.69至0.99])与跌倒状态独立相关。
肌肉密度与跌倒状态相关,与功能活动能力无关。肌肉密度可作为功能活动能力测试的补充,作为评估功能良好的老年人跌倒风险的生物测量指标。