Induced frailty and acute sarcopenia are overlapping consequences of hospitalisation in older adults.
Author
Welch, CarlyGreig, Carolyn
Majid, Zeinab
Masud, Tahir
Moorey, Hannah
Pinkney, Thomas
Jackson, Thomas
Publication date
2022-09-01Subject
Diseases & disorders of systemic, metabolic or environmental originBiochemistry
Orthopaedics
Surgery
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Objectives: To determine the effects of hospitalisation upon frailty and sarcopenia. Methods: Prospective cohort study at single UK hospital including adults ≥70 years-old admitted for elective colorectal surgery, emergency abdominal surgery, or acute infections. Serial assessments for frailty (Fried, Frailty Index, Clinical Frailty Scale [CFS]), and sarcopenia (handgrip strength, ultrasound quadriceps and/or bioelectrical impedance analysis, and gait speed and/or Short Physical Performance Battery) were conducted at baseline, 7 days post-admission/post-operatively, and 13 weeks post-admission/post-operatively. Results: Eighty participants were included (mean age 79.2, 38.8% females). Frailty prevalence by all criteria at baseline was higher among medical compared to surgical participants. Median and estimated marginal CFS values and Fried frailty prevalence increased after 7 days, with rates returning towards baseline at 13 weeks. Sarcopenia incidence amongst those who did not have sarcopenia at baseline was 20.0%. However, some participants demonstrated improvements in sarcopenia status, and overall sarcopenia prevalence did not change. There was significant overlap between diagnoses with 37.3% meeting criteria for all four diagnoses at 7 days. Conclusions: Induced frailty and acute sarcopenia are overlapping conditions affecting older adults during hospitalisation. Rates of frailty returned towards baseline at 13 weeks, suggesting that induced frailty is reversible.Citation
Welch C, Greig C, Majid Z, Masud T, Moorey H, Pinkney T, Jackson T. Induced frailty and acute sarcopenia are overlapping consequences of hospitalisation in older adults. J Frailty Sarcopenia Falls. 2022 Sep 1;7(3):103-116. doi: 10.22540/JFSF-07-103Type
ArticlePMID
36119557Publisher
Hylonome Publicationsae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.22540/JFSF-07-103