Camargo Erica C, Weinstein Galit, Beiser Alexa S, Tan Zaldy S, DeCarli Charles, Kelly-Hayes Margaret, Kase Carlos, Murabito Joanne M, Seshadri Sudha
Department of Neurology, School of Medicine, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts.
School of Public Health, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.
J Alzheimers Dis. 2016 Jul 14;53(4):1597-608. doi: 10.3233/JAD-160229.
Handgrip strength and gait speed are simple measures of physical capability and have been associated with current and future health outcomes. However, studies on their associations with brain structure and function in middle-aged adults are lacking.
To assess the relationship of fast-paced walking speed and handgrip strength with risk of dementia, Alzheimer's disease (AD), and stroke, as well as the cross-sectional associations with cognitive and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measures in a middle-aged community sample.
Framingham Offspring (n = 2,176; mean age 62, 54% female) had physical function, brain MRI, and cognitive evaluations between 1999 and 2005 and were followed-up for incident dementia AD and stroke until 11 years later. We related walking speed and handgrip strength to incident dementia, AD, and stroke using Cox models, and to brain and cognitive measures using multivariable linear and logistic regression. Models were adjusted for age, sex, education, and vascular risk factors.
Slow walking and weak handgrip were associated with more than 2.5-fold increase in risk of AD. Weaker handgrip was associated with an increased risk of incident stroke (HR 1.74, 95% CI: 1.12-2.70/SDU, p = 0.01) in persons ≥65 years. Both measures were associated with lower total brain volume and poorer performance on tests of visual memory, language, executive function, and visuoperceptual function. Slower gait was also related to poorer verbal memory, and weaker handgrip to poorer abstraction.
Tests of walking speed and handgrip strength may serve as clinical markers of brain structure and function and may improve dementia risk prediction.
握力和步速是身体能力的简单指标,与当前和未来的健康状况相关。然而,关于它们与中年成年人脑结构和功能之间关联的研究尚属缺乏。
在一个中年社区样本中,评估快步行走速度和握力与痴呆症、阿尔茨海默病(AD)和中风风险的关系,以及与认知和脑磁共振成像(MRI)测量结果的横断面关联。
弗雷明汉后代研究(n = 2176;平均年龄62岁,54%为女性)在1999年至2005年间进行了身体功能、脑MRI和认知评估,并随访至11年后发生的痴呆症、AD和中风事件。我们使用Cox模型将行走速度和握力与痴呆症、AD和中风事件相关联,并使用多变量线性和逻辑回归将其与脑和认知测量结果相关联。模型对年龄、性别、教育程度和血管危险因素进行了校正。
行走缓慢和握力较弱与AD风险增加超过2.5倍相关。握力较弱与≥65岁人群中风事件风险增加相关(风险比1.74,95%置信区间:1.12 - 2.70/标准差单位,p = 0.01)。这两项指标均与全脑体积较小以及视觉记忆、语言、执行功能和视觉感知功能测试表现较差相关。步态较慢还与言语记忆较差相关,握力较弱与抽象能力较差相关。
行走速度和握力测试可能作为脑结构和功能的临床标志物,并可能改善痴呆症风险预测。