Physical activity and weight decline before frailty: Implications for frailty prevention and reverse causation
Hee-kyoung Nam, Jie Shen, Andrea Wershof Schwartz, Sung-il Cho, Changzheng Yuan, Yuan Ma

TL;DR
Tracking physical activity and weight changes over time can help predict frailty risk in older adults.
Contribution
The study shows that declines in physical activity and weight loss independently increase frailty risk and that reverse causation affects these associations.
Findings
Decreased physical activity and weight loss were independently linked to higher frailty risk.
Combined declines in both activity and weight posed the highest frailty risk.
The association between physical activity and frailty was stronger when measured closer to diagnosis.
Abstract
Background Physical inactivity and mid-life obesity are modifiable risk factors for frailty. However, declines in physical activity and weight loss may co-occur in the years preceding the onset of frailty. It is undetermined whether monitoring concurrent changes in physical activity and body weight can improve the early detection of frailty and to what extent their relationship is influenced by reverse causation. Methods We examined the longitudinal changes in physical activity and body weight over 8 years and the incidence of frailty over a median follow-up of 8 years among 5,759 community-dwelling older adults from the nationally representative Health and Retirement Study (US). We further assessed physical activity and BMI measured at different years (0, 2, 4, 6, and 8 years, respectively) preceding frailty assessment. Findings A total of 1293 incident frailty cases were documented.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFrailty in Older Adults · Nutrition and Health in Aging · Chronic Disease Management Strategies
