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BACKGROUND: muscle wasting is associated with a detrimental outcome in older people. Muscle strength measurements could be useful as part of a clinical evaluation of oldest old patients to determine who are most at risk of accelerated decline in the near future. OBJECTIVE: this study aimed to assess if handgrip strength predicts changes in functional, psychological and social health among oldest old. DESIGN: the Leiden 85-plus Study is a prospective population-based follow-up study. SUBJECTS: five-hundred fifty-five, all aged 85 years at baseline, participated in the study. METHODS: handgrip strength was measured with a handgrip strength dynamometer. Functional, psychological and social health were assessed annually. Baseline data on chronic diseases were obtained from the treating physician, pharmacist, electrocardiogram and blood sample analysis. RESULTS: at age 85, lower handgrip strength was correlated with poorer scores in functional, psychological and social health domains (all, P 0.30). CONCLUSION: poor handgrip strength predicts accelerated dependency in ADL and cognitive decline in oldest old. Measuring handgrip strength could be a useful instrument in geriatric practice to identify those oldest old patients at risk for this accelerated decline.
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Taekema et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1c75da973ffece4bc3d9ff — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afq022
Diana G. Taekema
Rijnstate Hospital
Jacobijn Gussekloo
Leiden University
Andrea B. Maier
The Royal Melbourne Hospital
Age and Ageing
Leiden University Medical Center
Rijnstate Hospital
Netherlands Consortium for Healthy Ageing
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