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Review
. 2017 Feb;14(1):85-99.
doi: 10.1177/1479972316679664. Epub 2017 Feb 24.

Sarcopenia and frailty in chronic respiratory disease

Affiliations
Review

Sarcopenia and frailty in chronic respiratory disease

Anna E Bone et al. Chron Respir Dis. 2017 Feb.

Abstract

Sarcopenia and frailty are geriatric syndromes characterized by multisystem decline, which are related to and reflected by markers of skeletal muscle dysfunction. In older people, sarcopenia and frailty have been used for risk stratification, to predict adverse outcomes and to prompt intervention aimed at preventing decline in those at greatest risk. In this review, we examine sarcopenia and frailty in the context of chronic respiratory disease, providing an overview of the common assessments tools and studies to date in the field. We contrast assessments of sarcopenia, which consider muscle mass and function, with assessments of frailty, which often additionally consider social, cognitive and psychological domains. Frailty is emerging as an important syndrome in respiratory disease, being strongly associated with poor outcome. We also unpick the relationship between sarcopenia, frailty and skeletal muscle dysfunction in chronic respiratory disease and reveal these as interlinked but distinct clinical phenotypes. Suggested areas for future work include the application of sarcopenia and frailty models to restrictive diseases and population-based samples, prospective prognostic assessments of sarcopenia and frailty in relation to common multidimensional indices, plus the investigation of exercise, nutritional and pharmacological strategies to prevent or treat sarcopenia and frailty in chronic respiratory disease.

Keywords: COPD; exercise; frail; rehabilitation; respiratory disease; sarcopenia.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of Conflicting Interests: The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Relationships between frailty, sarcopenia and quadriceps weakness in patients with COPD derived from the study by Maddocks et al. Numbers represent patients with each phenotype (n = 707).

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