Induced frailty and acute sarcopenia are overlapping consequences of hospitalisation in older adults

  • Welch C
  • Greig C
  • Majid Z
  • et al.
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Abstract

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.

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APA

Welch, C., Greig, C., Majid, Z., Masud, T., Moorey, H., Pinkney, T., & Jackson, T. (2022). Induced frailty and acute sarcopenia are overlapping consequences of hospitalisation in older adults. Journal of Frailty, Sarcopenia and Falls, 07(03), 103–116. https://doi.org/10.22540/jfsf-07-103

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