aging and frailty Flashcards
1
Q
sarcopenia vs frailty
A
- sarcopenia: skeletal muscle loss, poor muscle quality
- frailty: deficits accumulation, fatigue, sedentary behavior, weight loss, cognitive impairment, social isolation
2
Q
frailty
A
- decreased reserve and resistance to stressors, that result in cumulative declines across multiple physiologic systems, causing heightened vulnerability to adverse outcomes
- multiple components
3
Q
frailty predicts
A
- falls, ED visits and hospitalization and readmission, entry into residential care, survival
4
Q
functional status
A
- single best predictor of institutionalization is imapired functional status
- self-reported function is an accurate predictor of health risks and costs
- 23% of older adults report some functional limitation in either ADLs or IADLs much higher percentage for the older segments
5
Q
ADLs vs iADLs
A
- ADL: bathing, dressing, transferring, toileting, grooming, feeding, mobility
- iADLs: telephone, meal prep, mangaing finances, taking medications, doing laundry, shopping, managing transportation
6
Q
fred’s frailty phenotype components
A
- shrinking: > 10 pounds lost unintentionally in past year
- self-reported exhaustion: self-report of exhaustion on CES-D (center for epidemiologic studies - depression) questions
- weakness (grip strength): grip strength lowest 20% adjsuted for gender and BMI
- slow walking speed: slowest 20% to walk 15 feet
- low physical activity: lowest quintile of weighted kilocalorie expended per week
frailty - deficits in =/> 3
7
Q
fred’s frailty phenotype components
A
- shrinking: > 10 pounds lost unintentionally in past year
- self-reported exhaustion: self-report of exhaustion on CES-D (center for epidemiologic studies - depression) questions
- weakness (grip strength): grip strength lowest 20% adjsuted for gender and BMI
- slow walking speed: slowest 20% to walk 15 feet
- low physical activity: lowest quintile of weighted kilocalorie expended per week
frailty - deficits in =/> 3
8
Q
why use grip strength for frailty
A
- correlated with overall body strength
- can use for goals
- cutoffs by gender and BMI
9
Q
why does gait speed predict survival
A
- requires integration of a lot of systems: brain function, strength, motor control, motor plan
10
Q
clinical frailty scale
A
- easier than fried’s phenotype
11
Q
sarcopenia
A
- degenerative loss (atrophy) of skeletal muscle mass (0.5-1% loss per year after the age of 25) - loss of muscle quality and loss of strength associated with aging
- imbalance between protein synthesis and degradation rates
- sarcopenia is a component of the frailty syndrome
- still unknown whether sarcopenia is inevitable result of aging or due to combo of factors
- decreased force production with decrease muscle quality/attenuation
12
Q
frailty intervention trial (FIT)
A
- aim to identify frail older people and address frailty signs and symptoms
- FIT: community dwelling > 70 yrs, assessed using Fried’s criteria, RCT assessed frail with intervention
13
Q
aerobic capacity (on average) drops about [ ] in adults 50-70 years old
A
- 1.5%
- loss of aerobic capacity (12.2%) after 10 days of bed rest was equivalent to almost a decade of decline
14
Q
older people who develop new functional deficits during hospitalization are
A
- older people who develop deficits during hospitalization are less likely to recover lost function
15
Q
[ ] is the leading complication of hospitalization for the elderly
A
- functional decline
- occurs in 34-50% of hospitalized older adults
- leads to previously independent patients requiring post-acute care (SNF, IRF, LTACH, home care)