Fitness age outperforms body mass index in differentiating aging patterns and health risk profiles of healthy adults aged 51–80 years

Author:

A. Manca,L. Ventura,G. Martinez,M. Morrone,A. Boi,G. Fiorito,B. Mercante,A. Cano,G. Catte M.,S. Cruciani,C. Pozzati,A. Uccula,F. Ginatempo,M. Maioli,P. Delitala A.,G. Solinas,A. Zinellu,C. Carru,F. DeriuORCID

Abstract

AbstractPhysical fitness has been extensively shown to strongly associate with general health status and major health risks. Here we tested the ability of a novel estimate of fitness age (FitAge) to differentiate aging trajectories.This study aimed at (1) testing the ability of FitAge to differentiate aging patterns among decelerated, normal, and accelerated agers in selected health domains, (2) estimating the risk for developing major health issues depending on the aging trajectory, and (3) comparing FitAge to body mass index (BMI) categorization in differentiating healthy from unhealthy aging patterns.A total of 176 volunteers participated in this cross-sectional study. Participants underwent clinical screening and a comprehensive assessment of body composition, nutritional and health-related status, cognitive functioning, and haematochemical analyses with routine tests, oxidative stress, and inflammation markers. Scores for major health risks were also computed.FitAge outperformed BMI in estimating major health risk scores and was able to differentiate decelerated from normal and accelerated agers for health risk profile and several physiological domains. Body composition, immune system activation, and inflammation markers emerged as those variables flagging the largest differences between decelerated and accelerated aging patterns.The novel estimate of biological aging can accurately differentiate both in women and men decelerated from accelerated agers in almost all the domains scrutinized. Overall, decelerated aging is linked to positively oriented features which associate with reduced risk of developing major health issues.The present findings have potential relevance and practical implications to identify individuals at higher risk of accelerated aging according to their FitAge estimated via simple and cost-effective motor tests.

Funder

Università degli Studi di Sassari

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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