建立一个评估后covid -19时代老年人肌肉骨骼健康的资源:SaLSA的时间?

Q4 Medicine Clinical Osteology Pub Date : 2022-02-28 DOI:10.3390/osteology2010005
F. Laskou, Alexander Linfield, Pritti Aggarwal, E. Dennison, H. Patel
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引用次数: 2

摘要

骨骼肌减少症和骨质疏松症与发病率和死亡率相关。这两种相互关联的疾病的发展和进展与遗传和生活方式因素有关,包括营养和身体活动。由于COVID-19大流行和感染对个人实施的限制导致了广泛的生活方式改变,数据显示对身体活动水平产生了负面影响。在COVID-19感染和限制仍然是研究的障碍之际,迫切需要了解大流行对老年人肌肉骨骼健康的影响。我们测试了招募当地社区居住的老年人来建立一个新的研究肌肉骨骼健康的队列的可行性——南安普敦老龄化纵向研究(SaLSA)。我们邀请了1993名在英国南安普敦健康生活GP合作组织注册的社区居住老年人参加一项研究。调查问卷由参与者完成,内容包括健康、生活方式、药物使用、合并症、身体活动、营养、肌肉减少症、骨质疏松症和生活质量。为今后的联系征求了许可。对175份返回的问卷数据进行初步试验,采用描述性统计。参与者的中位年龄为男女80.4岁,女性81.3岁(77.9-84岁),男性81.1岁(77.3-83.6岁)。大多数(N = 168/171, 98%)参与者为白种人背景;36/53(68%)的女性参与者和38/119(32%)的男性参与者独居。超过80%(295/353)的人同意为未来的研究联系。从初级保健实践中招募参与者进入研究是可行的。接下来的步骤是通过物理性能测量、握力测定仪、DXA扫描、高分辨率外围定量计算机断层扫描(HRpQCT)、大腿超声和肌肉活检对一部分参与者进行详细的肌肉骨骼表型分析。我们对SaLSA的愿景是建立一个发现科学和机制研究的平台,目标是改善老年人的医疗保健。
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Establishing a Resource to Assess Musculoskeletal Health in Older Adults in the Post-COVID-19 Era: Time to SaLSA?
Sarcopenia and osteoporosis are associated with morbidity and mortality. The development and progression of these two interrelated conditions are related to genetic and lifestyle factors, including nutrition and physical activity. Restrictions placed on individuals due to the COVID-19 pandemic and infection have led to widespread lifestyle modifications, with data suggesting a negative impact on physical activity levels. There is an urgent need to understand the effect of the pandemic on musculoskeletal health in older adults, at a time when COVID-19 infection and restrictions remain a barrier to research studies. We tested the feasibility of recruiting local community-dwelling older people to establish a new cohort investigating musculoskeletal health—the Southampton Longitudinal Study of Ageing (SaLSA). We invited 1993 community-dwelling older adults registered at the Living Well GP partnership in Southampton, UK, to participate in a study. Questionnaires were completed by participants on health, lifestyle, medication use, comorbidities, physical activity, nutrition, sarcopenia, osteoporosis, and quality of life. Permission was sought for future contact. Descriptive statistics were used on the initial pilot of 175 returned questionnaire data. The median age of participants was 80.4 years in both sexes, 81.3 years (77.9–84) in females, and 81.1 years in males (77.3–83.6). The majority (N = 168/171, 98%) of participants were of white Caucasian background; 36/53 (68%) female participants and 38/119 (32%) male participants lived alone. Over 80% (295/353) consented to be contacted for future studies. Recruitment of participants from a primary care practice into a research study was feasible. The next steps are to perform detailed musculoskeletal phenotyping through physical performance measures, grip strength dynamometry, DXA scanning, high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (HRpQCT), thigh ultrasound, and muscle biopsy, in a subset of participants. Our vision for SaLSA is to build a platform for discovery science and mechanistic studies, with the goal of improving the health care of older people.
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Clinical Osteology
Clinical Osteology Medicine-Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
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