Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
Laboratory of Epidemiology and Population Sciences, National Institute on Aging Intramural Research Program, Baltimore, Maryland.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2020 Jun 2;75(6):e56-e68. doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbaa012.
Previous studies in older adults found robust associations between executive functions (EF) and physical performance, as well as sociodemographic variation in physical performance decline. To examine these associations earlier in the adult lifespan, we investigated relations of EF, race, and sex with age-related physical performance decline during middle adulthood.
Participants were 2,084 urban-dwelling adults (57.2% female; 57.8% African American; 37.3% living in poverty; mean baseline age = 48.1) from the Healthy Aging in Neighborhoods of Diversity across the Life Span study. Mixed-effects regression was used to examine interactive relations among EF, race, sex, and age (indexing time) with change in dominant and nondominant handgrip strength and lower extremity strength over approximately 5 years. All analyses adjusted for poverty status, and subsequently adjusted for education, body mass index, hypertension, and diabetes.
There were no significant prospective associations between EF and decline in physical performance measures. Significant cross-sectional associations revealed that lower EF was associated with worse performance on all physical performance measures averaged across both time points (p < .05). A significant two-way interaction of Sex × Age (p = .019) revealed that men experienced greater age-related decline in lower extremity strength than women.
Findings did not reveal prospective associations between EF and physical performance decline in middle adulthood. However, they identified robust cross-sectional associations between EF and physical performance, and unexpectedly greater decline in lower extremity strength in men than women. Ultimately, these findings may inform prevention and intervention strategies targeting groups at risk for poorer physical function status and decline.
先前的老年人研究发现,执行功能(EF)与身体表现之间存在很强的关联,以及身体表现下降在社会人口统计学上的差异。为了在成年早期检查这些关联,我们研究了 EF、种族和性别与中年时期与年龄相关的身体表现下降之间的关系。
参与者是来自多样性跨越生命跨度的邻里健康衰老研究的 2084 名城市居民成年人(57.2%女性;57.8%非裔美国人;37.3%生活贫困;平均基线年龄=48.1)。混合效应回归用于检查 EF、种族、性别和年龄(索引时间)与大约 5 年内主要和次要手握力和下肢力量变化之间的相互关系。所有分析都调整了贫困状况,随后调整了教育程度、体重指数、高血压和糖尿病。
EF 与身体表现测量的下降之间没有显著的前瞻性关联。显著的横断面关联表明,较低的 EF 与所有身体表现测量在两个时间点的表现较差相关(p<.05)。性别×年龄的显著双向交互作用(p=.019)表明,男性比女性经历了更大的下肢力量与年龄相关的下降。
研究结果没有揭示 EF 与中年身体表现下降之间的前瞻性关联。然而,它们确定了 EF 与身体表现之间存在很强的横断面关联,以及男性下肢力量下降比女性更大。最终,这些发现可能为针对身体功能状态和下降风险较高的群体的预防和干预策略提供信息。