Epidemiology of sarcopenia: Determinants throughout the lifecourse
Epidemiology of sarcopenia: Determinants throughout the lifecourse
Sarcopenia is an age-related syndrome characterised by progressive and generalised loss of skeletal muscle mass and strength; it is a major contributor to the risk of physical frailty, functional impairment in older people, poor health-related quality of life and premature death. Many different definitions have been used to describe sarcopenia and have resulted in varying estimates of prevalence of the condition. The most recent attempts of definitions have tried to integrate information on muscle mass, strength and physical function and provide a definition that is useful in both research and clinical settings. This review focuses on the epidemiology of the three distinct physiological components of sarcopenia, and highlights the similarities and differences between their patterns of variation with age, gender, geography and time and the individual risk factors that cluster selectively with muscle mass, strength and physical function. Methods used to measure muscle mass, strength and physical functioning and how differences in these approaches can contribute to the varying prevalence rates will also be described. The evidence for this review was gathered by undertaking a systematic search of the literature. The descriptive characteristics of muscle mass, strength and function described in this review point to the urgent need for a consensual definition of sarcopenia incorporating these parameters.
Shaw, Sarah
9629b12a-8ee2-4483-a9ca-6efb4eef74c8
Dennison, Elaine
ee647287-edb4-4392-8361-e59fd505b1d1
Cooper, Cyrus
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Shaw, Sarah
9629b12a-8ee2-4483-a9ca-6efb4eef74c8
Dennison, Elaine
ee647287-edb4-4392-8361-e59fd505b1d1
Cooper, Cyrus
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Shaw, Sarah, Dennison, Elaine and Cooper, Cyrus
(2017)
Epidemiology of sarcopenia: Determinants throughout the lifecourse.
Calcified Tissue International.
(doi:10.1007/s00223-017-0277-0).
Abstract
Sarcopenia is an age-related syndrome characterised by progressive and generalised loss of skeletal muscle mass and strength; it is a major contributor to the risk of physical frailty, functional impairment in older people, poor health-related quality of life and premature death. Many different definitions have been used to describe sarcopenia and have resulted in varying estimates of prevalence of the condition. The most recent attempts of definitions have tried to integrate information on muscle mass, strength and physical function and provide a definition that is useful in both research and clinical settings. This review focuses on the epidemiology of the three distinct physiological components of sarcopenia, and highlights the similarities and differences between their patterns of variation with age, gender, geography and time and the individual risk factors that cluster selectively with muscle mass, strength and physical function. Methods used to measure muscle mass, strength and physical functioning and how differences in these approaches can contribute to the varying prevalence rates will also be described. The evidence for this review was gathered by undertaking a systematic search of the literature. The descriptive characteristics of muscle mass, strength and function described in this review point to the urgent need for a consensual definition of sarcopenia incorporating these parameters.
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Final-Epidemiology of Sarcopenia. 280317
- Accepted Manuscript
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art_10.1007_s00223-017-0277-0
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Accepted/In Press date: 30 March 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 April 2017
Organisations:
Medical Research Council, Human Development & Health
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Local EPrints ID: 410467
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/410467
ISSN: 0171-967X
PURE UUID: e64bc18f-a885-4d7f-b34a-25236dde9e30
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Date deposited: 09 Jun 2017 08:56
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 05:12
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