Physical Activity and the Changes in Maximal Isometric Strength in Men and Women from the Age of 75 to 80 Years
- 1 December 1997
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
- Vol. 45 (12) , 1439-1445
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1532-5415.1997.tb03193.x
Abstract
To research the natural changes in maximal isometric strength, over a period of 5 years, in men and women aged 75 at baseline, and to study the effect of everyday physical activity on strength alterations. A 5-year longitudinal study. Exercise laboratory. The target group in 1989 was the total 75-year-old population of Jyväskylä. One hundred one men (81%) and 186 women (75%) participated in baseline strength tests, and after 5 years, 55 men and 111 women (70% and 72% of the survivors) took part in the follow-up measurements. Maximal isometric hand grip, arm flexion, knee extension, trunk flexion, and trunk extension forces were measured using dynamometers. Self-rated physical activity was recorded using a scale by Grimby (1986). Strength changes were compared between groups based on the amount of everyday physical activity: (1) remained active (AA, 24 men, 24 women); (2) remained sedentary (SS, 11 men, 43 women); (3) decreased activity (AS, 11 women); and (4) increased activity (SA, 32 women). AS and SA could be formed for women only because of the small number of men. All analyses were stratified by gender. The average percentage change in strength over 5 years among survivors varied from a 4% increase in knee extension strength observed in men and women to a 16% decrease in grip strength in women. The grip strength decrease was greater in women than men. The AA men maintained their trunk extension strength at a higher level than the SS men. Time by group interactions in men were not significant. In women, the rate of decline in AS was 32% in grip and 27% in elbow flexion strength, which was greater than in the other activity groups. The AA women retained their knee extension strength at a higher level than the other groups. Those who died before follow-up tests exhibited poorer strength test results at baseline. Physical activity decreased over follow-up. Strength alterations with age differed between muscle groups. Undertaking everyday physical activities such as household work, walking, and gardening, which are also the most common physically demanding activities of older people, may play an important role in maintaining strength at an adequate level for independent living.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Muscle Performance and Structure in the Elderly as Studied Cross-sectionally and LongitudinallyThe Journals of Gerontology: Series A, 1995
- Maximal Isometric Strength and Mobility among 75-year-old Men and WomenAge and Ageing, 1994
- Maximal isometric muscle strength and anthropometry in 75‐year‐old men and women in three Nordic localitiesScandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports, 1994
- Normal values for handgrip strength in 920 men and women aged over 65 years, and longitudinal changes over 4 years in 620 survivorsClinical Science, 1993
- The quadriceps strength of healthy elderly people remeasured after eight yearsMuscle & Nerve, 1993
- Longitudinal study of physical ability in the oldest-old.American Journal of Public Health, 1989
- A Longitudinal Study of Functional Change and Mortality in the United StatesJournal of Gerontology, 1988
- Exercise Physiology in Geriatric PracticeActa Medica Scandinavica, 1986
- Physical Activity and Muscle Training in the ElderlyActa Medica Scandinavica, 1986
- Muscular strength profiles and anthropometry in random samples of men aged 31–35, 51–55 and 71–75 yearsErgonomics, 1985