WEAK muscles are closely linked to Alzheimer's disease in older adults, a study suggests.
The research, from the United States, showed a pattern of reduced Alzheimer's risk with increasing muscle strength.
The strongest patients had 61 per cent less chance of developing the disease than the weakest. No reason for the association has y
et been found, but it could involve energy production in the body or other hidden health problems, the scientists believe.
Alzheimer's disease – the most common form of dementia – causes a progressive loss of memory and thinking ability. However, it is also known to be associated with symptoms such as an impaired gait, depression and a weakened grip.
Researchers at Rush University Medical Centre, in Chicago, studied 970 adults with an average age of about 80 who did not initially have Alzheimer's.
Each participant was rated for mental function and given a physical strength score derived from testing 11 muscle groups. At least one further evaluation was carried out over an average follow-up period of 3.6 years.
Of the total, 138 participants (14.2 per cent) went on to develop Alzheimer's.
Muscle strength scores ranged from minus 1.6 to 3.3 units. Every unit increase in initial muscle strength correlated with a 43 per cent reduction in the risk of developing Alzheimer's during the study period, the researchers found.
Participants in the top 10 per cent of scores for muscular strength were almost two-thirds (61 per cent) less likely to develop less at risk of Alzheimer's than those who were in the bottom 10 per cent.