Frailty Assessment in Aortic Stenosis based on Dynamic Interconnection between Cardiac and Motor Systems
Patricio Arru\'e, Kaveh Laksari, Nancy Sweitzer, Mindy Fain, Nima, Toosizadeh

TL;DR
This study investigates how motor and autonomic nervous system performance relate to frailty in older adults with and without aortic stenosis, suggesting multimodal measures could improve frailty assessment.
Contribution
It introduces a multimodal approach combining motor and heart rate dynamics to assess frailty, highlighting the role of autonomic nervous system measures independent of aortic stenosis.
Findings
Significant differences in motor scores between frailty groups.
Autonomic nervous system measures correlate with frailty levels.
No interaction effect between aortic stenosis and frailty on measures.
Abstract
Background: Aortic stenosis (AS) is the most common acquired valvar disease and is associated with increased risk for frailty. Frailty as a geriatric syndrome is associated with muscle weakness and a compromised autonomic nervous system (ANS) performance in older adults. The purpose of the current work was to assess differences in both motor and ANS performance, and interaction between them, as symptoms of frailty in community dwelling older adults with and without AS. Results: Eighty-six participants were recruited, including 30 with (age=7211, 10 non-frail and 20 pre-frail/frail) and 56 without AS (age=808, 12 non-frail and 44 pre-frail/frail). There was a significant difference in UEF motor score between older adults with and without AS (p<0.01, mean values of 0.570.25 and 0.480.23, respectively). Differences in UEF motor score was also observed between the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiac Imaging and Diagnostics
