1. Change in muscle strength and muscle mass in older hospitalized patients
- Author
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Carel G. M. Meskers, Kira Scheerman, Nini H. Jonkman, Andrea B. Maier, Jeanine M. Van Ancum, Hanne E. Smeenk, Roeliene C. Kruizinga, Internal medicine, Rehabilitation medicine, and Amsterdam Movement Sciences - Rehabilitation & Development
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Bed rest ,Biochemistry ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,Grip strength ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Skeletal/physiology ,Internal medicine ,Exercise/physiology ,Genetics ,medicine ,80 and over ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Hand Strength/physiology ,Exercise physiology ,Muscle, Skeletal ,SDG 2 - Zero Hunger ,Exercise ,Molecular Biology ,Aged ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Aged, 80 and over ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Hand Strength ,business.industry ,Skeletal muscle ,Cell Biology ,Confidence interval ,Aging/physiology ,Muscle, Skeletal/physiology ,Hospitalization ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Strictly standardized mean difference ,Meta-analysis ,Physical therapy ,Muscle ,business - Abstract
Hospitalization may induce a decrease of muscle strength and muscle mass in older patients due to physical inactivity, malnutrition and diseases, negatively affecting health outcome. We aimed to examine the literature on change in muscle strength and muscle mass in older patients during hospitalization. A literature search was performed in major electronic databases from inception to March 2016. Studies including hospitalized patients with a mean age ≥ 65 years, describing change of hand grip strength and/or muscle mass were found eligible. Extracted data were divided in hand grip strength or muscle mass and stratified by elective or acute admission. Meta-analysis was conducted using Comprehensive Meta-analysis. Twenty-five studies were included, describing a total of 1789 patients with a mean age range of 65 to 85.8 years and an overall median length of stay of 14.7 days. Pooled hand grip strength and muscle mass were found to significantly decrease in electively admitted older patients during hospitalization (standardized mean difference (95% confidence interval): − 0.42 (− 0.66, − 0.17) and − 0.44 (− 0.61, − 0.27)), but not in acutely admitted older patients (standardized mean difference (95% confidence interval): 0.18 (− 0.02, 0.37) and − 0.25 (− 0.58, 0.09)). In conclusion, decrease in muscle strength and muscle mass in older patients is dependent on the type of admission.
- Published
- 2017
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