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How gait influences frailty models and health‐related outcomes in clinical‐based and population‐based studies: a systematic review
Author(s) -
Bortone Ilaria,
Sardone Rodolfo,
Lampignano Luisa,
Castellana Fabio,
Zupo Roberta,
Lozupone Madia,
Moretti Biagio,
Giannelli Gianluigi,
Panza Francesco
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of cachexia, sarcopenia and muscle
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.803
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 2190-6009
pISSN - 2190-5991
DOI - 10.1002/jcsm.12667
Subject(s) - gait , observational study , gerontology , population , physical medicine and rehabilitation , medicine , cognition , quality of life (healthcare) , activities of daily living , cognitive decline , disease , dementia , physical therapy , environmental health , psychiatry , nursing , pathology
Aging is often associated with a decline in physical function that eventually leads to loss of autonomy in activities of daily living (ADL). Walking is a very common ADL, important for main determinants of quality of life in older age, and it requires the integration of many physiological systems. Gait speed has been described as the ‘sixth vital sign’ because it is a core indicator of health and function in aging and disease. We reviewed original studies up to June 2020 that assessed frailty in both longitudinal and cross‐sectional observational studies, paying particular attention to how gait is measured in older population and how the gait parameter adopted may influence the estimated frailty models and the health‐related outcomes of the various studies (i.e. clinical, cognitive, physical, and nutritional outcomes). Eighty‐five studies met the search strategy and were included in the present systematic review. According to the frailty tools, more than 60% of the studies used the physical phenotype model proposed by Fried and colleagues, while one‐third referred to multi‐domain indexes or models and only 5% referred to other single‐domain frailty models (social or cognitive). The great heterogeneity observed in gait measurements and protocols limited the possibility to directly compare the results of the studies and it could represent an important issue causing variability in the different outcome measures in both clinical‐and population‐based settings. Gait appeared to be an indicator of health and function also in frail older adults, and different gait parameters appeared to predict adverse health‐related outcomes in clinical, cognitive, and physical domains and, to a lesser extent, in nutritional domain. Gait has the potential to elucidate the common basic mechanisms of cognitive and motor decline. Advances in technology may extend the validity of gait in different clinical settings also in frail older adults, and technology‐based assessment should be encouraged. Combining various gait parameters may enhance frailty prediction and classification of different frailty phenotypes.

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