Absolute and Body Mass Index Normalized Handgrip Strength Percentiles by Gender, Ethnicity, and Hand Dominance in Americans.

Advances in geriatric medicine and research Pub Date : 2020-01-01 Epub Date: 2019-12-31 DOI:10.20900/agmr20200005
Ryan McGrath, Kyle J Hackney, Nicholas A Ratamess, Brenda M Vincent, Brian C Clark, William J Kraemer
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引用次数: 26

Abstract

Background: Gender and ethnicity are factors which influence strength, and hand dominance could be a critical component of handgrip strength (HGS) testing. Providing such HGS percentiles across the lifespan may help to identify weakness-related health concerns. We sought to generate growth charts and curves for HGS by gender and ethnicity in a nationally-representative sample of Americans aged 6-80 years.

Methods: Data from 13,617 participants in the 2011-2012 and 2013-2014 waves of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey were analyzed. HGS was measured with a handgrip dynamometer. Age, gender, ethnicity, and hand dominance were self-reported. Body Mass Index (BMI) was calculated from height and body mass. Measures of absolute HGS and HGS normalized to BMI were separately included in parametric quantile regression analyses for determining the 10th-90th percentiles across ages by gender and ethnicity. Similar models were also conducted by hand dominance.

Results: Differences in absolute HGS and HGS normalized to BMI quantiles across ages existed for each ethnicity regardless of gender. In men, absolute HGS generally increased until about 25 years of age, began to decline around age 30 years, and regressed into older adulthood. In women, absolute HGS appeared to rise starting at age 6 years, peaked between 20 and 30 years of age, but was maintained into mid-life before declining in older adulthood. Similar results were found for HGS normalized to BMI.

Conclusions: Our findings provide percentile charts for HGS capacity that could be utilized for comparing individual measures of HGS to those from a United States population-representative sample.

美国人按性别、种族和手优势划分的绝对握力百分位数和体重指数标准化。
背景:性别和种族是影响握力的因素,手优势可能是握力(HGS)测试的关键组成部分。在整个生命周期中提供这样的HGS百分位数可能有助于识别与虚弱相关的健康问题。我们试图在一个具有全国代表性的6-80岁美国人样本中,按性别和种族生成HGS的增长图表和曲线。方法:对2011-2012年和2013-2014年全国健康与营养调查13617名参与者的数据进行分析。HGS的测量采用手握式测功机。年龄、性别、种族和手优势都是自我报告的。体重指数(BMI)由身高和体重计算得出。绝对HGS和归一化为BMI的HGS分别纳入参数分位数回归分析,以确定按性别和种族划分的年龄的第10 -90百分位数。类似的模型也通过手的优势进行。结果:不论性别,不同种族的绝对HGS和按BMI分位数标准化的HGS在不同年龄都存在差异。在男性中,绝对HGS通常在25岁左右增加,在30岁左右开始下降,并在成年后回归。在女性中,绝对HGS从6岁开始上升,在20到30岁之间达到顶峰,但一直保持到中年,然后在成年后下降。将HGS归一化到BMI后也发现了类似的结果。结论:我们的研究结果提供了HGS容量的百分位数图,可用于比较HGS的个人测量与美国人口代表性样本的测量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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