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Journal Article

Citation

Ortiz PJ, Tello T, Aliaga EG, Casas PM, Peinado JE, Miranda JJ, Varela LF. Geriatr. Gerontol. Int. 2018; 18(2): 293-300.

Affiliation

School of Medicine, Cayetano Heredia University, Lima, Peru.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Japan Geriatrics Society, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/ggi.13182

PMID

29076226

Abstract

AIM: To determine the association between multimorbidity and gait speed in a population-based sample of older people without functional dependency.

METHODS: Data were obtained from a previously made cross-sectional population-based study of individuals aged >60 years carried out in San Martin de Porres, the second most populous district in Lima, Peru. We included well-functioning, independent older people. Exclusion criteria emphasized removing conditions that would impair gait. The exposure of interest was non-communicable chronic disease multimorbidity, and the outcome was gait speed determined by the time required for the participant to walk a distance of 8 m out of a total distance of 10 m. Generalized linear models were used to estimate adjusted gait speed by multimorbidity status.

RESULTS: Data from 265 older adults with a median age of 68 years (IQR 63-75 years) and 54% women were analyzed. The median gait speed was 1.06 m/s (SD 0.27) and the mean number of chronic conditions per adult was 1.1 (SD ±1). The difference in mean gait speed between older adults without a chronic condition and those with ≥3 chronic conditions was 0.24 m/s. In crude models, coefficients decreased by a significant exponential factor for every increase in the number of chronic conditions. Further adjustment attenuated these estimates.

CONCLUSIONS: Slower speed gaits are observed across the spectrum of multimorbidity in older adults without functional dependency. The role of gait speed as a simple indicator to evaluate and monitor general health status in older populations is expanded to include older adults without dependency.

© 2017 Japan Geriatrics Society.


Language: en

Keywords

Peru; chronic disease; gait speed; multimorbidity; older people

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