Factors associated with sarcopenia in institutionalized elderly

J Public Health (Oxf). 2021 Dec 10;43(4):806-813. doi: 10.1093/pubmed/fdaa122.

Abstract

Background: The diagnosis of sarcopenia is based on the analysis of strength, functionality and muscle mass. The objective was to verify the factors associated with sarcopenia in institutionalized elderly.

Methods: In total, 219 elderly individuals (≥60 years old) living in long-term institutions in Natal/RN were included in the study. After defining the elderly as sarcopenic or non-sarcopenic, anthropometric, biochemical, sociodemographic and health-related were analyzed. The Student t-test and Mann-Whitney test were used to analyze the quantitative, while the chi-square test was used for the qualitative variables. Finally, Poisson regression was used to provide prevalence ratios for those variables that presented differences in the bivariate analyses.

Results: Physical capacity and anthropometry were associated with sarcopenia. For each 1 cm of knee height, the elderly presented 2.71% more chance of not having sarcopenia, and eutrophic or overweight individuals (according to BMI) presented 37.71 and 91.81% chances, respectively, of not presenting sarcopenia. Elderly individuals who ambulate have a 30.08% chance of not being considered sarcopenic. In addition, biochemical and anthropometric indicators demonstrated a relationship of sarcopenia with malnutrition.

Conclusion: Sarcopenia is associated with a loss of body mass, not only selective muscle mass, and greater physical inability to ambulate.

Keywords: frail elderly; housing for the elderly; protein malnutrition; skeletal muscle.

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Anthropometry
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Humans
  • Middle Aged
  • Prevalence
  • Sarcopenia* / diagnosis
  • Sarcopenia* / epidemiology