Age-associated changes in hand grip and quadriceps muscle strength ratios in healthy adults
Age-associated changes in hand grip and quadriceps muscle strength ratios in healthy adults
Background and aims: uscle strength may decline with age differentially in the upper and lower limbs. This information is difficult to capture through a single measure. The present study therefore aimed to characterize the relative changes in handgrip and lower limb muscle strength with aging by expressing them as a ratio.
Methods: thirty-eight healthy volunteers aged 20–82 years performed maximal voluntary contractions (MVC) of quadriceps and handgrip using a custom-built transducer and a Jamar dynamometer respectively.
Results: the grip-quadriceps ratios for young adults was similar in males and females (0.75); indicating knee extensor force exceeded grip force by approximately 25%. Ratios were increased in older adults (p=0.05), and strength of the two muscle groups was approximately equal (1.1). Pearson’s correlation coefficients for grip against quadriceps strength were r=0.63 (young males), r=0.83 (young females), r=0.35 (older males) and r=0.05 (older females).
Conclusions: the ratio used demonstrated clear differences between the age groups. The reduced muscle strength with increasing age was expected but the higher grip/quadriceps strength ratios quantify a greater loss of quadriceps than grip strength with aging. It remains to be investigated whether the relatively greater rate of decline in quadriceps strength seen in healthy older people is more exaggerated in those who are frail, which would have implications for using grip strength as a physical marker of lower limb strength and function in those at risk of immobility and falls.
aging, grip strength, knee, muscle strength, sarcopenia
245-250
Samuel, D.
03b00738-9b9c-4c0a-a85a-cf43fc0932fc
Wilson, K.
b01327aa-ff73-44c4-b67b-907d38367e47
Martin, Helen J.
147af305-a2fb-4ed5-a1fb-5453af49cb60
Allen, R.
956a918f-278c-48ef-8e19-65aa463f199a
Aihie Sayer, A.
fb4c2053-6d51-4fc1-9489-c3cb431b0ffb
Stokes, M.
71730503-70ce-4e67-b7ea-a3e54579717f
5 June 2012
Samuel, D.
03b00738-9b9c-4c0a-a85a-cf43fc0932fc
Wilson, K.
b01327aa-ff73-44c4-b67b-907d38367e47
Martin, Helen J.
147af305-a2fb-4ed5-a1fb-5453af49cb60
Allen, R.
956a918f-278c-48ef-8e19-65aa463f199a
Aihie Sayer, A.
fb4c2053-6d51-4fc1-9489-c3cb431b0ffb
Stokes, M.
71730503-70ce-4e67-b7ea-a3e54579717f
Samuel, D., Wilson, K., Martin, Helen J., Allen, R., Aihie Sayer, A. and Stokes, M.
(2012)
Age-associated changes in hand grip and quadriceps muscle strength ratios in healthy adults.
Aging Clinical and Experimental Research, 24 (3), .
(doi:10.1007/BF03325252).
(PMID:23114550)
Abstract
Background and aims: uscle strength may decline with age differentially in the upper and lower limbs. This information is difficult to capture through a single measure. The present study therefore aimed to characterize the relative changes in handgrip and lower limb muscle strength with aging by expressing them as a ratio.
Methods: thirty-eight healthy volunteers aged 20–82 years performed maximal voluntary contractions (MVC) of quadriceps and handgrip using a custom-built transducer and a Jamar dynamometer respectively.
Results: the grip-quadriceps ratios for young adults was similar in males and females (0.75); indicating knee extensor force exceeded grip force by approximately 25%. Ratios were increased in older adults (p=0.05), and strength of the two muscle groups was approximately equal (1.1). Pearson’s correlation coefficients for grip against quadriceps strength were r=0.63 (young males), r=0.83 (young females), r=0.35 (older males) and r=0.05 (older females).
Conclusions: the ratio used demonstrated clear differences between the age groups. The reduced muscle strength with increasing age was expected but the higher grip/quadriceps strength ratios quantify a greater loss of quadriceps than grip strength with aging. It remains to be investigated whether the relatively greater rate of decline in quadriceps strength seen in healthy older people is more exaggerated in those who are frail, which would have implications for using grip strength as a physical marker of lower limb strength and function in those at risk of immobility and falls.
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Published date: 5 June 2012
Keywords:
aging, grip strength, knee, muscle strength, sarcopenia
Organisations:
Institute of Sound & Vibration Research, Medicine, Health Sciences
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Local EPrints ID: 192483
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/192483
ISSN: 1594-0667
PURE UUID: e51349df-e15d-474a-bab8-b75800b5693e
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Date deposited: 05 Jul 2011 07:21
Last modified: 17 Apr 2024 01:39
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Author:
K. Wilson
Author:
Helen J. Martin
Author:
A. Aihie Sayer
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