Effect of weight loss and exercise on frailty in obese older adults

Dennis T. Villareal, Marian Banks, David R. Sinacore, Catherine Siener, Samuel Klein

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

250 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Obesity exacerbates the age-related decline in physical function and causes frailty in older persons. However, appropriate treatment for obese older persons is unknown. We evaluated the effects of weight loss and exercise therapy on physical function and body composition in obese older persons. Methods: We screened 40 obese older volunteers and eventually randomized 27 frail obese older volunteers to treatment or control groups. Treatment consisted of 6 months of weekly behavioral therapy for weight loss in conjunction with exercise training 3 times per week. Physical function was evaluated with measurements of frailty (Physical Performance Test, peak oxygen consumption, and Functional Status Questionnaire); strength, gait, and balance tests; body composition with dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry; and quality of life using the Medical Outcomes Survey 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey. Results are reported as mean±SD. Results: Two subjects in the treatment group did not comply with the intervention, and 1 subject in the control group withdrew. Analyses included all 27 subjects originally randomized to the treatment and control groups. The treatment group lost 8.4%±5.6% of body weight, whereas weight did not change in the control group (+0.5%±2.8%; P<.001). Compared with the control group, fat mass decreased (-6.6±3.4 vs +1.7±4.1 kg; P<.001), without a change in fat-free mass (-1.2±2.1 vs -1.0±3.5 kg; P=.75) in the treatment group. The Physical Performance Test score (2.6±2.5 vs 0.1±1.0; P=.001), peak oxygen consumption (1.7±1.6 vs 0.3±1.1 mL/min per kilogram; P=.02), and Functional Status Questionnaire score (2.9±3.7 vs -0.2±3.9; P=.02) improved in treated subjects compared with control subjects. Treatment also improved strength, walking speed, obstacle course, 1-leg limb stance time, and health survey physical subscale scores (all P<.05). Conclusion: These findings suggest that weight loss and exercise can ameliorate frailty in obese older adults.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)860-866
Number of pages7
JournalArchives of internal medicine
Volume166
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 24 2006

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