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ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION |
1 From the Department of Aging and Geriatric Research, College of Medicine, Institute on Aging, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL (MC, CL, CM, and MP); the Department of Gerontology, Geriatrics, and Physiatry, Catholic University of Sacred Heart, Rome, Italy (MC and GO); the Tuscany Health Regional Agency, Florence, Italy (FL); the Geriatric Rehabilitation Unit, Azienda Sanitaria di Firenze, Florence, Italy (SB); the Laboratory of Epidemiology, Demography, and Biometry, National Institute on Aging, Bethesda, MD (JMG); and the Longitudinal Studies Section, Clinical Research Branch, National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, MD (LF)
Background: Frailty is a common condition in elders and identifies a state of vulnerability for adverse health outcomes.
Objective: Our objective was to provide a biological face validity to the well-established definition of frailty proposed by Fried et al.
Design: Data are from the baseline evaluation of 923 participants aged
65 y enrolled in the Invecchiare in Chianti study. Frailty was defined by the presence of
3 of the following criteria: weight loss, exhaustion, low walking speed, low hand grip strength, and physical inactivity. Muscle density and the ratios of muscle area and fat area to total calf area were measured by using a peripheral quantitative computerized tomography (pQCT) scan. Analyses of covariance and logistic regressions were performed to evaluate the relations between frailty and pQCT measures.
Results: The mean age (±SD) of the study sample was 74.8 ± 6.8 y, and 81 participants (8.8%) had
3 frailty criteria. Participants with no frailty criteria had significantly higher muscle density (71.1 mg/cm3, SE = 0.2) and muscle area (71.2%, SE = 0.4) than did frail participants (69.8 mg/cm3, SE = 0.4; and 68.7%, SE = 1.1, respectively). Fat area was significantly higher in frail participants (22.0%, SE = 0.9) than in participants with no frailty criteria (20.3%, SE = 0.4). Physical inactivity and low walking speed were the frailty criteria that showed the strongest associations with pQCT measures.
Conclusion: Frail subjects, identified by an easy and inexpensive frailty score, have lower muscle density and muscle mass and higher fat mass than do nonfrail persons.
Key Words: Frailty skeletal muscle body composition fat mass inflammation muscle mass muscle density aging epidemiology
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