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Fall and fracture risk in sarcopenia and dynapenia with and without obesity: the role of lifestyle interventions

journal contribution
posted on 2015-08-01, 00:00 authored by David ScottDavid Scott, Robin DalyRobin Daly, K M Sanders, P R Ebeling
Due to their differing etiologies and consequences, it has been proposed that the term "sarcopenia" should revert to its original definition of age-related muscle mass declines, with a separate term, "dynapenia", describing muscle strength and function declines. There is increasing interest in the interactions of sarcopenia and dynapenia with obesity. Despite an apparent protective effect of obesity on fracture, increased adiposity may compromise bone health, and the presence of sarcopenia and/or dynapenia ("sarcopenic obesity" and "dynapenic obesity") may exacerbate the risk of falls and fracture in obese older adults. Weight loss interventions are likely to be beneficial for older adults with sarcopenic and dynapenic obesity but may result in further reductions in muscle and bone health. The addition of exercise including progressive resistance training and nutritional strategies, including protein and vitamin D supplementation, may optimise body composition and muscle function outcomes thereby reducing falls and fracture risk in this population.

History

Journal

Current osteoporosis reports

Volume

13

Issue

4

Pagination

235 - 244

Publisher

Current Medicine Group

Location

Philadelphia, Pa.

eISSN

1544-2241

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Current Medicine Group