# Heterogeneity in Aging: Exploring Grip Strength Variability in Population-Based Age-Sex Cohorts

**Authors:** Richard Fortinsky, Katherine Zavez, Lisa Barry, George Kuchel, Ofer Harel

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.2964 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how grip strength varies with age in men and women, finding that patterns of variability differ between genders and over time.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into gender-specific patterns of grip strength variability with aging using large population data.

## Key findings

- Female grip strength variability does not significantly change across older age groups.
- Male grip strength variability decreases cross-sectionally but increases longitudinally within age groups.
- Heterogeneity in grip strength with aging differs between genders and study designs.

## Abstract

Heterogeneity in aging is defined as variability in characteristics associated with chronological age. The concept of increased heterogeneity of health-related characteristics with increasing age has long been recognized as a tenet of geriatric medicine. However, a surprisingly limited amount of research has tested this concept. We used grip strength, an objective measure of physical function and frailty, to explore patterns of grip strength variability in population-based age-sex cohorts cross-sectionally and longitudinally. We constructed a study cohort from the UK Biobank database consisting of adults (52% female) with two measures of grip strength (n = 73,134). Age groups at initial measurement were: 40-44, 45-49, 50-54, 55-59, 60-64, and 65-69. In females and males separately, we compared: (1) patterns of grip strength variability across successively older age groups at one time point; and (2) changes over time in grip strength variability for individuals within the same age group cohort. Cross-sectional results revealed that, for females, grip strength variability did not differ significantly between pairs of successively older age groups; for males, we found statistically significant decreases in grip strength variability across successively older age groups. Longitudinal results showed that grip strength variability did not change over time within age group cohorts among females. In contrast, grip strength variability increased over time within nearly all age group cohorts among males. We conclude that heterogeneity in grip strength with aging operates differently for females and males, and that patterns of heterogeneity for males are strikingly different depending on whether age is explored cross-sectionally or longitudinally.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12761180