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Mild cognitive impairment predicts the onset of sarcopenia: a longitudinal analysis from the English Longitudinal Study on Ageing

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posted on 2024-07-12, 15:40 authored by Francesco Saverio Ragusa, Nicola Veronese, Laura Vernuccio, Ligia Dominguez, Lee Smith, Francesco Bolzetta, Ai Koyanagi, Roberto Monastero, Mario Barbagallo

Background

Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and sarcopenia are two common conditions in older people. It is not widely known if MCI could predict the onset of sarcopenia. Therefore, we aimed to investigate whether MCI could predict the occurrence of sarcopenia in a population of older adults.

Methods

In the ELSA (English Longitudinal Study on Ageing), MCI was defined as the absence of dementia, preserved functional capacity and low performance in three objective cognitive tests. Sarcopenia was diagnosed as having low handgrip strength and low skeletal muscle mass index during follow-up. The longitudinal association between MCI at the baseline and incident sarcopenia was assessed using a multivariable logistic regression model, reporting the data as adjusted odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95%CI).

Results

3,106 participants (mean age of 63.1 years; 55.3% males) were included. People with MCI reported significantly lower mean handgrip strength values and Skeletal Mass Index (SMI), as well as a higher prevalence of obesity at baseline. At baseline, 729 people had MCI and during the ten years follow-up period, 12.1% of the initial population included had sarcopenia. On multivariate analysis, adjusted for 18 potential confounders, the presence of MCI (OR = 1.236; 95%CI: 1.090–1.596, p = 0.01) significantly predicted the onset of sarcopenia during follow-up.

Conclusion

The presence of MCI at baseline was associated with a higher incidence of sarcopenia at ten-years follow-up, demonstrating a likely role of MCI as a predictor of the onset of sarcopenia in older people.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

36

Publication title

Aging Clinical and Experimental Research

ISSN

1594-0667

Publisher

Springer

File version

  • Accepted version

Item sub-type

Article

Affiliated with

  • School of Psychology and Sport Science Outputs

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