Back to Search Start Over

The association of walking pace and incident heart failure and subtypes among postmenopausal women

Authors :
Moafi‐Madani Miremad
Xiaochen Lin
Somwail Rasla
Amr El Meligy
Mary B. Roberts
Deepika Laddu
Matthew Allison
Lisa W. Martin
Aladdin H. Shadyab
Jo Ann E. Manson
Rowan Chlebowski
Gurusher Panjrath
Michael J. LaMonte
Simin Liu
Charles B. Eaton
Source :
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, vol 70, iss 5, J Am Geriatr Soc
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

BackgroundTo investigate the association between walking pace and the risk of heart failure (HF) and HF sub-types.MethodsWe examined associations of self-reported walking pace with risk of incident HF and HF subtypes of preserved (HFpEF) and reduced (HFrEF) ejection fractions, among 25,183 postmenopausal women, ages 50-79 years. At enrollment into the Women's Health Initiative cohort in 1993-1998, this subset of women was free of HF, cancer, or the inability to walk one block, with self-reported information on walking pace and walking duration. Multivariable Cox regression was used to examine associations of walking pace (casual 3 mph) with incident HF. We also examined the joint association of walking pace and duration with incident HF.ResultsThere were 1455 incident adjudicated acute decompensated HF hospitalization cases during a median of 16.9 years of follow-up. There was a strong inverse association between walking pace and overall risk of HF (HR=0.73, 95% CI [0.65, 0.83] for average vs. casual walking; HR=0.66, 95%CI [0.56, 0.78] for fast vs. casual walking). There were similar associations of walking pace with HFpEF (HR=0.73, 95%CI [0.62, 0.86] average vs. casual; HR=0.63, 95%CI [0.50, 0.80] for fast vs. casual) and with HFrEF (HR=0.72, 95%CI [0.57, 0.91] for average vs. casual; HR=0.74, 95%CI [0.54, 0.99] for fast vs. casual). The risk of HF associated with fast walking with less than 1h/week walking duration was comparable with the risk of HF among casual and average walkers with more than 2h/week walking duration.ConclusionWalking pace was inversely associated with risks of overall HF, HFpEF, and HFrEF in postmenopausal women. Whether interventions to increase the walking pace in older adults will reduce HF risk and whether fast pace will compensate for the short duration of walking warrants further study.

Details

ISSN :
15325415 and 00028614
Volume :
70
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d689248bd83714dee0714377e7bb4ee7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jgs.17657