(Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Less frequent participation in social activity among older adults is associated with a more rapid rate of motor function decline, according to a recent report.
"Decline in motor function is a familiar consequence of aging, with older persons displaying a wide spectrum of loss of motor abilities ranging from mild decreased muscle strength and bulk and reduced speed and dexterity to overt motor impairment with concomitant disability," authors Aron S. Buchman, M.D., and colleagues at Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, have written.
Although decline in motor function is becoming a major public
health concern, "little is known about risk factors for motor
function decline that could translate into potential public health
or clinical interventions," the authors write.
Researchers examined whether frequency of social activity in
late life was related to motor function decline in 906 older adults
participating in the Rush Memory and Aging Project from 1997 to
2008. Researchers evaluated participants' grip and pinch strength
and their ability to stand on one leg and then on their toes, to
walk in line in a heel-to-toe manner, place pegs on a board in 30
seconds and tap index fingers for 10 seconds bilaterally.
Participants completed a health survey to assess their physical
activities and used a five-point rating scale to measure frequency
of social activity, with one indicating participation in a
particular activity once a year or less; two, several times a year;
three, several times a month; four, several times a week and five,
every day or almost every day. Demographic information, education,
weight, height and disabilities also were recorded.
"A lower frequency of participation in social activity was
associated with a more rapid rate of motor function decline," with
each one-point decrease in a participant's social activity score
associated with approximately 33 percent more rapid rate of
decline, the authors note. Additionally, a one-point decrease on
the social activity scale was equivalent to being approximately
five years older at baseline. This amount of change is associated
with more than a 40 percent increased risk of death and a 65
percent increased risk of developing disability.
"The association of social activity with the rate of global
motor decline did not vary along demographic lines and was
unchanged after controlling for potential confounders including
late-life physical and cognitive activity, disability, global
cognition depressive symptoms, body composition and chronic medical
conditions," researchers write.
SOURCE: Archives of Internal Medicine, a JAMA/Archives journal. June 22, 2009
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