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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Midlife Cardiovascular Status and Old Age Physical Functioning Trajectories in Older Businessmen
Timo E. StrandbergTimo E. StrandbergSari StenholmTimo TörmäkangasKaisu H. PitkäläMikaela B. Von BonsdorffMarkus J. Haapanensubject
MaleAgingCvd riskHealth Statuseducationfyysinen toimintakykyDisease030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyCompeting risksHealthy AgingDisability Evaluation03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePhysical functioningRisk FactorsSurveys and QuestionnairesGrowth mixture modelingphysical functioningtrajectoriesHumansMedicineProspective Studies030212 general & internal medicineHealthy agingProspective cohort studyExercisegrowth mixture modelFinlandAgedCARDIOVASCULAR HEALTHbusiness.industrycardiovascular healthennusteetMiddle Aged3. Good healthikääntyminenStandard errorhealthy aginglife course epidemiologyCardiovascular Diseases3121 General medicine internal medicine and other clinical medicinesydän- ja verisuonitauditphysical functioning trajectoriesChronic disease presentGeriatrics and GerontologybusinessDemographydescription
Objectives The associations between cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk and later physical functioning have been observed, but only a few studies with follow-up into old age are available. We investigated the association between cardiovascular status in midlife and physical functioning trajectories in old age. Design Prospective cohort study. Setting Helsinki Businessmen Study. Participants We studied white men born between 1919 and 1934 in the Helsinki Businessmen Study (HBS, initial n = 3490). Measurements Three CVD status groups were formed based on clinical measurements carried out in 1974: signs of CVD (diagnosed clinically or with changes in ECG, chronic disease present or used medication, n = 563); healthy and low CVD risk (n = 593) and high CVD risk (n = 1222). Of them, 1560 men had data on physical functioning from at least one of four data collection waves between 2000-2010. Ten questions from the RAND-36 (SF-36) survey were used to construct physical functioning trajectories with latent class growth mixture models. Mortality was accounted for in competing risk models. Results A five-class solution provided the optimal number of trajectories: "intact," "high stable," "high and declining," "intermediate and declining," and "consistently low" functioning. Compared with low CVD risk, high CVD risk in midlife decreased the risk of being classified into the intact (fully adjusted β = -3.98; standard error = 2.0; P = .046) relative to the consistently low physical functioning trajectory. Compared with low CVD risk, those with signs of CVD were less likely to follow the intact, high stable, or high and declining relative to the consistently low trajectory (all P Conclusion Among businessmen, a more favorable CVD profile in midlife was associated with better development of physical functioning in old age. J Am Geriatr Soc 67:2490-2496, 2019.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-08-24 | Journal of the American Geriatrics Society |