Background
muscle strength measured as handgrip strength declines with increasing age and predicts mortality. While handgrip strength is determined by lifestyle through nutrition and physical activity, it has almost exclusively been studied in western populations with a sedentary lifestyle. This study aims to investigate the relation between handgrip strength, ageing and mortality in a population characterised by a predominance of malnutrition and manual labour.
Design
a population-based longitudinal study.
Setting
a traditional African rural population in Ghana.
Subjects
nine hundred and twenty-three community-dwelling individuals aged 50 and older.
Methods
demographic characteristics were registered. At baseline, height, body mass index (BMI) and handgrip strength were measured and compared with those in a western reference population. Survival of the participants was documented during a period of up to 2 years.
Results
handgrip strength was dependent on age, sex, height and BMI. Compared with the western reference population, handgrip strength was lower due to a lower height and BMI but declined over age similarly. Risk of mortality was lower in participants having higher handgrip strength, with a hazard ratio of 0.94 per kg increase (P = 0.002). After adjustment for age, sex, tribe, socio-economic status, drinking water source, height and BMI, only handgrip strength remained predictive of mortality.
Conclusion
in a traditional rural African population characterised by malnutrition and manual labour, handgrip strength declines over age and independently predicts mortality similar to western populations. Handgrip strength can be used as a universal marker of ageing.
© The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society.
Overview publication
Title | Handgrip strength, ageing and mortality in rural Africa. |
Date | May 1st, 2015 |
Issue name | Age and ageing |
Issue number | v44.3:465-70 |
DOI | 10.1093/ageing/afu165 |
PubMed | 25331975 |
Authors | |
Keywords | Africa, ageing, handgrip strength, mortality, older people |
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