Older adults face Double Whammy when it comes
to body fat
Newswise — When it comes to body fat, today’s older
adults face a double whammy, according to new
research from Wake Forest University School of
Medicine and colleagues. Up until age 80, older
adults not only gain fat as they age – but because
of the obesity epidemic – they actually begin their
older years fatter.
The result is an increased risk
of diabetes, heart disease, high blood pressure,
arthritis and disability, according to Jingzhong
Ding, M.D., Ph.D., lead author and a researcher on
aging at Wake Forest Baptist.
The study, reported in the
current issue of the American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition, focuses on changes in body composition
related to aging and in the population over time. It
is significant because the researchers used DEXA
(dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry) to measure actual
body fat to determine the proportion of fat versus
lean mass (muscle and organs).
The measurements were made on
1,786 well-functioning older adults from Pittsburgh,
Pa., and Memphis, Tenn., from 1997 to 2003.
Participants were 70-79 at the time of enrollment, a
critical period for the development of disability.
Body composition – especially the combination of too
much body fat and a decrease in muscle – is believed
to contribute to disability.
“This study provides a better
picture of age-related changes in body composition
and it’s not a good picture,” said Ding, an
assistant professor of gerontology and geriatric
medicine. “It demonstrates that up until age 80,
both older men and women gained fat but lost lean
mass each year. These age-related changes were
compounded by the obesity epidemic.”
In addition to measuring the
effects of aging on body composition, the
researchers also looked at the effects of the
obesity epidemic, which most scientists agree began
in the late 1970s. Between 1976-80 and 1999-2000,
the rate of obesity doubled in older adults.
The scientists divided
participants into 10 groups based on their birth
years (from 1918 to 1927). They found that at the
same age, those born later – who had spent more
years during the period when obesity was increasing
– had a higher percentage of body fat. For example,
among 80-year-old men, those born in 1927 had about
10 pounds more fat and 3.75 pounds of muscle,
compared to those born in 1918.
“The combined effects of aging
and the obesity epidemic results in bigger body size
and less lean mass among the elderly,” said Ding.
“This may lead to disability and other illnesses in
the elderly and could be dramatic in the coming
years. It points out the great public health
importance of developing appropriate interventions
that target fat loss while preserving skeletal
muscle to prevent disability and other
obesity-related illnesses.”
The research was supported, in
part, by the National Institute on Aging. The
researchers analyzed data from the Health Aging and
Body Composition (ABC) Study, a large study
investigating the effects of body composition on
morbidity, disability and mortality in the elderly.
Other centers involved in the
study were the University of Pittsburgh, University
of Queensland in Australia, UV Medical Center in the
Netherlands, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill, University of California at San Francisco,
University of Tennessee Health Science Center,
University of Florida and North Florida/South
Georgia Health System.
Wake Forest University Baptist
Medical Center is an academic health system
comprised of North Carolina Baptist Hospital and
Wake Forest University Health Sciences, which
operates the university’s School of Medicine. U.S.
News & World Report ranks Wake Forest University
School of Medicine 18th in family medicine, 20th in
geriatrics, 25th in primary care and 41st in
research among the nation's medical schools. It
ranks 35th in research funding by the National
Institutes of Health. Almost 150 members of the
medical school faculty are listed in Best Doctors in
America.