Protein Intake Mediates the Relationship of Sleep Quality with Handgrip Strength in Older Persons 60+ Years
Marie Fanelli Kuczmarski, Elizabeth Orsega-Smith, May Beydoun, Michele Evans, Alan Zonderman

TL;DR
This study finds that protein intake helps connect better sleep with stronger handgrip in older adults.
Contribution
The study shows protein intake mediates the link between sleep quality and handgrip strength in older people.
Findings
Protein intake significantly influences handgrip strength in older adults.
Protein intake mediates the relationship between sleep quality and handgrip strength.
Adjusting for covariates, sleep quality's effect on handgrip is partially explained by protein intake.
Abstract
Handgrip strength, a measure of muscle strength and biomarker for health and vitality, may be influenced by diet, physical activity, and sleep. The study objective was to determine if protein intake/body weight (gm/kg) and engagement in physical activity mediated the relationship between sleep with handgrip strength in persons ≥ 60 years examined in the HANDLS study, 2013-2017. Sleep quality was measured using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index questionnaire. Handgrip strength was measured with Jamar Hydraulic Hand Dynamometer and expressed per Body Mass Index (based on measured height and weight). Protein intake was calculated from 2-24-hour recalls collected with the USDA Automated Multiple-Pass Method. Physical activity was self-reported and expressed as meeting the Life Simple 7 criterion (≥150 mins/week, 0-149 mins/week, 0 mins/wk). Mediation analysis used Hayes PROCESS macro,…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsNutrition and Health in Aging · Sleep and related disorders · Body Composition Measurement Techniques
