Age-Related Change in Mobility: Perspectives From Life Course Epidemiology and Geroscience

Mobility is the most studied and most relevant physical ability affecting quality of life with strong prognostic value for disability and survival. Natural selection has built the "engine" of mobility with great robustness, redundancy, and functional reserve. Efficient patterns of mobility...

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Vydané v:The journals of gerontology. Series A, Biological sciences and medical sciences Ročník 71; číslo 9; s. 1184
Hlavní autori: Ferrucci, Luigi, Cooper, Rachel, Shardell, Michelle, Simonsick, Eleanor M, Schrack, Jennifer A, Kuh, Diana
Médium: Journal Article
Jazyk:English
Vydavateľské údaje: United States 01.09.2016
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ISSN:1758-535X, 1758-535X
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Abstract Mobility is the most studied and most relevant physical ability affecting quality of life with strong prognostic value for disability and survival. Natural selection has built the "engine" of mobility with great robustness, redundancy, and functional reserve. Efficient patterns of mobility can be acquired during development even by children affected by severe impairments. Analogously, age-associated impairments in mobility-related physiological systems are compensated and overt limitations of mobility only occur when the severity can no longer be compensated. Mobility loss in older persons usually results from multiple impairments in the central nervous system, muscles, joints, and energetic and sensory physiological systems. Early preclinical changes in these physiological systems that precede mobility loss have been poorly studied. Peak performance, rate of decline, compensatory behaviors, or subclinical deterioration of physiological resources may cumulatively influence both timing of mobility loss and chances of recovery, but their role as risk factors has not been adequately characterized. Understanding the natural history of these early changes and intervening on them would likely be the most effective strategy to reduce the burden of disability in the population. For example, young women with low bone peak mass could be counseled to start strength resistance exercise to reduce their high risk of developing osteoporosis and fracture later in life. Expanding this approach to other physiological domains requires collecting and interpreting data from life course epidemiological studies, establishing normative measures of mobility, physical function, and physical activity, and connecting them with life course trajectories of the mobility-relevant physiological domains.
AbstractList Mobility is the most studied and most relevant physical ability affecting quality of life with strong prognostic value for disability and survival. Natural selection has built the "engine" of mobility with great robustness, redundancy, and functional reserve. Efficient patterns of mobility can be acquired during development even by children affected by severe impairments. Analogously, age-associated impairments in mobility-related physiological systems are compensated and overt limitations of mobility only occur when the severity can no longer be compensated. Mobility loss in older persons usually results from multiple impairments in the central nervous system, muscles, joints, and energetic and sensory physiological systems. Early preclinical changes in these physiological systems that precede mobility loss have been poorly studied. Peak performance, rate of decline, compensatory behaviors, or subclinical deterioration of physiological resources may cumulatively influence both timing of mobility loss and chances of recovery, but their role as risk factors has not been adequately characterized. Understanding the natural history of these early changes and intervening on them would likely be the most effective strategy to reduce the burden of disability in the population. For example, young women with low bone peak mass could be counseled to start strength resistance exercise to reduce their high risk of developing osteoporosis and fracture later in life. Expanding this approach to other physiological domains requires collecting and interpreting data from life course epidemiological studies, establishing normative measures of mobility, physical function, and physical activity, and connecting them with life course trajectories of the mobility-relevant physiological domains.Mobility is the most studied and most relevant physical ability affecting quality of life with strong prognostic value for disability and survival. Natural selection has built the "engine" of mobility with great robustness, redundancy, and functional reserve. Efficient patterns of mobility can be acquired during development even by children affected by severe impairments. Analogously, age-associated impairments in mobility-related physiological systems are compensated and overt limitations of mobility only occur when the severity can no longer be compensated. Mobility loss in older persons usually results from multiple impairments in the central nervous system, muscles, joints, and energetic and sensory physiological systems. Early preclinical changes in these physiological systems that precede mobility loss have been poorly studied. Peak performance, rate of decline, compensatory behaviors, or subclinical deterioration of physiological resources may cumulatively influence both timing of mobility loss and chances of recovery, but their role as risk factors has not been adequately characterized. Understanding the natural history of these early changes and intervening on them would likely be the most effective strategy to reduce the burden of disability in the population. For example, young women with low bone peak mass could be counseled to start strength resistance exercise to reduce their high risk of developing osteoporosis and fracture later in life. Expanding this approach to other physiological domains requires collecting and interpreting data from life course epidemiological studies, establishing normative measures of mobility, physical function, and physical activity, and connecting them with life course trajectories of the mobility-relevant physiological domains.
Mobility is the most studied and most relevant physical ability affecting quality of life with strong prognostic value for disability and survival. Natural selection has built the "engine" of mobility with great robustness, redundancy, and functional reserve. Efficient patterns of mobility can be acquired during development even by children affected by severe impairments. Analogously, age-associated impairments in mobility-related physiological systems are compensated and overt limitations of mobility only occur when the severity can no longer be compensated. Mobility loss in older persons usually results from multiple impairments in the central nervous system, muscles, joints, and energetic and sensory physiological systems. Early preclinical changes in these physiological systems that precede mobility loss have been poorly studied. Peak performance, rate of decline, compensatory behaviors, or subclinical deterioration of physiological resources may cumulatively influence both timing of mobility loss and chances of recovery, but their role as risk factors has not been adequately characterized. Understanding the natural history of these early changes and intervening on them would likely be the most effective strategy to reduce the burden of disability in the population. For example, young women with low bone peak mass could be counseled to start strength resistance exercise to reduce their high risk of developing osteoporosis and fracture later in life. Expanding this approach to other physiological domains requires collecting and interpreting data from life course epidemiological studies, establishing normative measures of mobility, physical function, and physical activity, and connecting them with life course trajectories of the mobility-relevant physiological domains.
Author Cooper, Rachel
Simonsick, Eleanor M
Kuh, Diana
Shardell, Michelle
Schrack, Jennifer A
Ferrucci, Luigi
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Luigi
  surname: Ferrucci
  fullname: Ferrucci, Luigi
  email: ferruccilu@mail.nih.gov
  organization: National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, Maryland. ferruccilu@mail.nih.gov
– sequence: 2
  givenname: Rachel
  surname: Cooper
  fullname: Cooper, Rachel
  organization: Medical Research Council Unit for Lifelong Health and Ageing at UCL, London, UK
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  givenname: Michelle
  surname: Shardell
  fullname: Shardell, Michelle
  organization: National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, Maryland
– sequence: 4
  givenname: Eleanor M
  surname: Simonsick
  fullname: Simonsick, Eleanor M
  organization: National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, Maryland
– sequence: 5
  givenname: Jennifer A
  surname: Schrack
  fullname: Schrack, Jennifer A
  organization: Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland
– sequence: 6
  givenname: Diana
  surname: Kuh
  fullname: Kuh, Diana
  organization: Medical Research Council Unit for Lifelong Health and Ageing at UCL, London, UK
BackLink https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26975983$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed
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Keywords Mobility
Epidemiology
Life course
Geroscience
Language English
License Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Gerontological Society of America 2016.
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PublicationTitle The journals of gerontology. Series A, Biological sciences and medical sciences
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Snippet Mobility is the most studied and most relevant physical ability affecting quality of life with strong prognostic value for disability and survival. Natural...
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SubjectTerms Aged
Aging
Evidence-Based Medicine
Exercise
Geriatric Assessment
Geriatrics
Humans
Italy - epidemiology
Mobility Limitation
Osteoporosis - complications
Osteoporosis - epidemiology
Osteoporosis - prevention & control
Persons with Disabilities - statistics & numerical data
Quality of Life
Risk Assessment
Risk Factors
United States - epidemiology
Title Age-Related Change in Mobility: Perspectives From Life Course Epidemiology and Geroscience
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