# The Impact of Frailty on Left Ventricle Mass and Geometry in Elderly Patients with Normal Ejection Fraction: A STROBE-Compliant Cross-Sectional Study

**Authors:** Stanisław Wawrzyniak, Ewa Wołoszyn-Horák, Julia Cieśla, Marcin Schulz, Michał Krawiec, Michał Janik, Paweł Wojciechowski, Iga Dajnowska, Dominika Szablewska, Jakub Bartoszek, Joanna Katarzyna Strzelczyk, Michal M. Masternak, Andrzej Tomasik

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcdd13010050 · Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease · 2026-01-16

## TL;DR

This study finds that frailty in elderly people is linked to changes in heart structure, including thickened walls and smaller chamber size, especially in women.

## Contribution

The study identifies a novel association between frailty and specific left ventricular remodeling patterns in elderly individuals with normal ejection fraction.

## Key findings

- Frailty is independently associated with increased left ventricular wall thickness and reduced end-diastolic diameter.
- Frailty is linked to concentric remodeling or hypertrophy of the left ventricle.
- The association between frailty and cardiac remodeling is more pronounced in women.

## Abstract

Background: There exists some inconsistent evidence on the relationship between altered cardiac morphology, its function, and frailty. Therefore, this study aimed to assess the associations among frailty, lean body mass, central arterial stiffness, and cardiac structure and geometry in older people with a normal ejection fraction. Methods: A total of 205 patients >65 years were enrolled into this ancillary analysis of the FRAPICA study and were assessed for frailty with the Fried phenotype scale. Left ventricular dimensions and geometry were assessed with two-dimensional echocardiography. Fat-free mass was measured using three-site skinfold method. Parametric and non-parametric statistics and analysis of covariance were used for statistical calculations. Results: Frail patients were older and women comprised the majority of the frail group. Frail men and women had comparable weight, height, fat-free mass, blood pressure, central blood pressure, and carotid–femoral pulse wave velocity to their non-frail counterparts. There was a linear correlation between the sum of frailty criteria and left ventricular end-diastolic diameter (Spearman R = −0.17; p < 0.05) and relative wall thickness (Spearman R = 0.23; p < 0.05). In the analysis of covariance, frailty and gender were independently associated with left ventricular mass (gender: β of −0.37 and 95% CI of −0.50–−0.24 at p < 0.001), the left ventricular mass index (gender: β of −0.23 and 95% CI of −0.37–−0.09 at p < 0.001), and relative wall thickness (frailty: β of −0.15 and 95% CI of −0.29–−0.01 at p < 0.05; gender: β of 0.23 and 95% CI of 0.09–0.36 at p < 0.01). Frailty was associated with a shift in heart remodeling toward concentric remodeling/hypertrophy. Conclusions: Frailty is independently associated with thickening of the left ventricular walls and a diminished left ventricular end-diastolic diameter, which are features of concentric remodeling or hypertrophy. This association appears to be more pronounced in women. Such adverse cardiac remodeling may represent another phenotypic feature linked to frailty according to the phenotype frailty criteria.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** arterial (MESH:D012078), cardiac remodeling (MESH:D020257), concentric remodeling (MESH:C567712), Frail (MESH:D000073496), hypertrophy (MESH:D006984)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

34 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12842445/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12842445