Abstract

Serum uric acid (UA) has strong anti-oxidant properties. Muscle strength and mass decrease with age, and recently, this decrease has been defined as sarcopenia. Sarcopenia may be triggered by oxidative stress. We investigated whether serum UA is associated with handgrip strength (HGS), which is a useful indicator of sarcopenia, among Japanese community-dwelling elderly persons. The present study included 602 men aged 72 ± 7 years and 847 women aged 71 ± 6 years from a rural village. We examined the cross-sectional relationship between serum UA and HGS. In both genders, HGS increased significantly with increased serum UA levels. A multiple linear regression analysis using HGS as an objective variable and various confounding factors as explanatory variables showed that in men age, drinking status, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), and estimated glomerular filtration ratio (eGFRCKDEPI) were independently and significantly associated with HGS, and in women, serum UA as well as age, body mass index, drinking status, diastolic blood pressure, and eGFRCKDEPI were independently and significantly associated with HGS. In women, age and multivariate-adjusted HGS were significantly higher in the Quartile-3 (4.8–5.4 mg/dL) and Quartile-4 groups (5.5–9.3 mg/dL) of serum UA than in the lower groups (0.7–4.7 mg/dL). These results suggest that serum UA may have a protective role in aging-associated decline in muscle strength in community-dwelling elderly women.

Highlights

  • Serum uric acid (UA) in humans is the end-product of purine metabolism, and a number of studies have shown that hyperuricemia is an important risk factor for systemic inflammation [1], endothelial dysfunction [2], hypertension [3], impaired fasting glucose [4], cardiovascular disease (CVD) and CVD mortality [5]

  • We investigated whether serum UA is associated with handgrip strength (HGS), which is a useful indicator of sarcopenia [14], among Japanese community-dwelling elderly persons

  • Body mass index (BMI), smoking status, drinking status, diastolic blood pressure (DBP), TG, HbA1c, prevalence of antidiabetic medication, prevalence of Chronic kidney disease (CKD), serum UA, and HGS were significantly higher in men, but high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), prevalence of antidyslipidemic medication, and eGFRCKDEPI were significantly lower

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Summary

Introduction

Serum uric acid (UA) in humans is the end-product of purine metabolism, and a number of studies have shown that hyperuricemia is an important risk factor for systemic inflammation [1], endothelial dysfunction [2], hypertension [3], impaired fasting glucose [4], cardiovascular disease (CVD) and CVD mortality [5]. Despite a strong association between serum UA level and various CVDs in humans, UA is not considered as having a pathogenetic role in these conditions, and instead, is considered to be a reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavenger, and to have strong anti-oxidant properties [6, 7].

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