Background/objectivesTo investigate the impact of eliminating fat-free adipose tissue (aFFAT) on the prevalence of low muscle mass in older adults.Subjects/methodsThree hundred and forty-three (153 men and 190 women) well-functioning Japanese… Click to show full abstract
Background/objectivesTo investigate the impact of eliminating fat-free adipose tissue (aFFAT) on the prevalence of low muscle mass in older adults.Subjects/methodsThree hundred and forty-three (153 men and 190 women) well-functioning Japanese older adults (aged 65–79) had their appendicular lean mass (aLM) and appendicular fat mass (aFM) measured using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA). aFFAT was then estimated from DXA-derived aFM (aFM = (FM/0.15)*0.85). Both traditional cutoffs and those corrected for aFFAT were used for diagnosing low muscle mass.ResultsWith traditional cutoff values, the prevalence of low muscle mass using the unadjusted aLM index was 20.1%. After adjusting the aLM index for aFFAT, the prevalence increased to 49.0% (p < 0.001). However, when the cutoff values were also adjusted for aFFAT, the prevalence of low muscle mass only increased to 23.0% (p < 0.001). Further, ~5% of the participants (7 men and 8 women) were newly classified as having low muscle mass after correction for aFFAT. However, several women (n = 5) were not classified as having low muscle mass using the corrected cutoff value, although they would have been when using the non-corrected cutoff.ConclusionsAdjusting for the effect of aFFAT on DXA-derived aLM significantly increases the prevalence of low muscle mass in older adults. For clinical research and practice, the influence of aFFAT on DXA-derived aLM may need to be taken into consideration when diagnosing low muscle mass.
               
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