1. Prevalence of sarcopenia in patients attending outpatient geriatric clinics: the ELLI study.
- Author
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CUESTA, FEDERICO, FORMIGA, FRANCESC, LOPEZ-SOTO5, ALFONSO, MASANES, FERRAN, RUIZ, DOMINGO, ARTAZA, IÑAKI, SALVÀ, ANTONI, SERRA-REXACH, JOSE A., LUQUE, XAVIER ROJANO I, and CRUZ-JENTOFT, ALFONSO J.
- Subjects
BODY composition ,SKELETAL muscle physiology ,ELDER care ,CLINICS ,STATISTICAL correlation ,DIAGNOSIS ,FISHER exact test ,GAIT in humans ,GRIP strength ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL screening ,PROBABILITY theory ,RESEARCH ,SECONDARY analysis ,SARCOPENIA ,SEVERITY of illness index ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,OLD age - Abstract
Objectives: the aim of this study is to know the prevalence of sarcopenia in geriatric outpatient clinics using the EGWSOP (EuropeanWorking Group on Sarcopenia in Older People) diagnostic criteria that include muscle mass, muscle strength and physical performance. Methods: subjects over 69 years old, able to walk without help and who attended five geriatric outpatient clinics were recruited. Body composition was assessed using bioimpedance analysis (BIA), grip strength using a JAMAR dynamometer and physical performance by the 4 m gait speed. Sarcopenia was diagnosed using the EGWSOP criteria (gait speed <0.8 m/s; grip strength <30 kg in men or <20 kg in women, and muscle mass index (MMI) <8.31 kg/m
2 in men or <6.68 kg/m2 in women). Results: two hundred and ninety-eight subjects were included (median age 83.2 years, 63.1% women). 19.1% had sarcopenia (12.7% men, 22.9% women); 20.1% had low muscle mass; 68.8% had low gait speed and 81.2% low grip strength. Only 21.9% of the subjects with low grip strength and 19.5% of those with low gait speed had sarcopenia. No correlations between muscle mass and either muscle strength or gait speed were detected. Conclusions: sarcopenia is present in one out of five subjects attending geriatric outpatient clinics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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