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The Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences 62:851-858 (2007)
© 2007 The Gerontological Society of America

Physical Fitness and 4-Year Mortality in an 80-Year-Old Population

Yutaka Takata, Toshihiro Ansai, Sumio Akifusa, Inho Soh, Yutaka Yoshitake, Yasuo Kimura, Kazuo Sonoki, Kiyoshi Fujisawa, Shuji Awano, Shuntaro Kagiyama, Tomoko Hamasaki, Ikuo Nakamichi, Akihiro Yoshida and Tadamichi Takehara

Divisions of 1 General Internal Medicine and 2 Community Oral Health Science, Kyushu Dental College, Kitakyushu, Japan.
3 Department for Interdisciplinary Studies of Lifelong Sport and Physical Activity, National Institute of Fitness and Sports in Kanoya, Japan.
4 Faculty of Culture and Education, Saga University, Japan.

Address correspondence to Yutaka Takata, MD, PhD, Division of General Internal Medicine, Kyushu Dental College, Manazuru 2-6-1, Kokurakita-ku, Kitakyushu City 803-8580, Japan. E-mail: yutaka{at}kyu-dent.ac.jp

Background. Because little is known about the relationship between physical fitness and mortality among very elderly people, we evaluated this association in a Japanese population of 80-year-old community residents.

Methods. Among 1282 80-year-old residents of Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan, 697 individuals (277 men and 420 women) underwent physical fitness tests of handgrip strength, isometric leg extensor strength, isokinetic leg extensor power, stepping rate, and one-leg standing time. Four years later, the dates and causes of death among the participants during those years were analyzed based on data from resident registration cards and from official death certificates.

Results. During the 4-year follow-up period, 107 individuals (58 men and 49 women) died. Of these deaths, 27 were due to cardiovascular disease (CVD), 27 to cancer, 22 to pneumonia, and the rest to other causes. The relative hazard ratios (HR) for all-cause mortality, adjusted for various confounding factors, fell with increases in stepping rate, and the HR for pneumonia mortality fell with increases in leg extensor strength. In contrast, there was no association between cardiovascular or cancer mortality and physical fitness.

Conclusions. A partial association was found between impaired physical fitness at the age of 80 years and increased mortality in the 4 years thereafter. Mortality due to all causes was related only to stepping rate, and mortality due to pneumonia was related to leg extensor strength. Mortality due to CVDs or cancers was not associated with physical fitness.







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Copyright © 2007 by The Gerontological Society of America.