Purpose:This study was aimed to determine associations of accelerometer-determined time and bouts of sedentary behavior,light physical activity(LPA),and moderate-to-vigorous PA(MVPA)with sarcopenia and incident falls ...Purpose:This study was aimed to determine associations of accelerometer-determined time and bouts of sedentary behavior,light physical activity(LPA),and moderate-to-vigorous PA(MVPA)with sarcopenia and incident falls over 12 months.Methods:A total of 3334 Swedish 70-year-olds were assessed for sarcopenia,as defined by the revised definition of the European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People.Assessments were based on low scores for appendicular lean mass(dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry),hand grip strength,and the Timed Up and Go test.For 7 days after baseline,total time and total number of bouts(≥10 min of continuous activity at a given intensity)of activity performed at sedentary,LPA,and MVPA intensities were assessed by accelerometer.Incident falls were self-reported 6 months and 12 months after baseline.Results:Only 1.8%of participants had probable or confirmed sarcopenia.After multivariable adjustment for other levels of activity,only greater MVPA time was associated with a decreased likelihood of having low appendicular lean mass,low hand grip strength,and slow Timed Up and Go time as defined by the European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People criteria(all p<0.05),and only MVPA time was associated with lower likelihood of probable or confirmed sarcopenia(odds ratio=0.80,95%confidence interval:0.71-0.91 h/week).Similar associations were identified for total number of bouts,with no evidence of threshold effects for longer duration of bouts of MVPA.A total of 14%of participants reported-1 fall,but neither total time nor bouts of activity was associated with incident falls(all p>0.05).Conclusion:Higher amounts of accelerometer-determined MVPA are consistently associated with a decreased likelihood of sarcopenia and its components,regardless of the length of bouts or amounts of sedentary behavior.展开更多
基金supported by the Swedish Research Council(Grant number 2011-2976)DS is supported by an Australian National Health and Medical Research Council(NHMRC)R.D.Wright Biomedical Career Development Fellowship(Grant number GNT1123014).
文摘Purpose:This study was aimed to determine associations of accelerometer-determined time and bouts of sedentary behavior,light physical activity(LPA),and moderate-to-vigorous PA(MVPA)with sarcopenia and incident falls over 12 months.Methods:A total of 3334 Swedish 70-year-olds were assessed for sarcopenia,as defined by the revised definition of the European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People.Assessments were based on low scores for appendicular lean mass(dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry),hand grip strength,and the Timed Up and Go test.For 7 days after baseline,total time and total number of bouts(≥10 min of continuous activity at a given intensity)of activity performed at sedentary,LPA,and MVPA intensities were assessed by accelerometer.Incident falls were self-reported 6 months and 12 months after baseline.Results:Only 1.8%of participants had probable or confirmed sarcopenia.After multivariable adjustment for other levels of activity,only greater MVPA time was associated with a decreased likelihood of having low appendicular lean mass,low hand grip strength,and slow Timed Up and Go time as defined by the European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People criteria(all p<0.05),and only MVPA time was associated with lower likelihood of probable or confirmed sarcopenia(odds ratio=0.80,95%confidence interval:0.71-0.91 h/week).Similar associations were identified for total number of bouts,with no evidence of threshold effects for longer duration of bouts of MVPA.A total of 14%of participants reported-1 fall,but neither total time nor bouts of activity was associated with incident falls(all p>0.05).Conclusion:Higher amounts of accelerometer-determined MVPA are consistently associated with a decreased likelihood of sarcopenia and its components,regardless of the length of bouts or amounts of sedentary behavior.