Appendicular Skeletal Muscle Mass Index and Physiological Performance in Post-Menopausal Women with Total Thyroidectomy

2021 
Sarcopenia is prevalent in postmenopausal women but is inconclusive in total thyroidectomy and under levothyroxine replacement. We aim to analyze the determinants of sarcopenia and investigate the early detection of sarcopenia in this group. Fifty postmenopausal women with total thyroidectomy were measured for body composition via Dual-energy X-ray Absorptiometry (DXA) and Appendicular Skeletal Muscle mass divided by the height square (ASM/ht2). Handgrip strength and gait speed and Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index (GNRI) were calculated. Eight determinants associated with sarcopenia include GNRI (β, 0.042; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.021 to 0.064), femoral neck BMD (β, 0.989; 95% CI, 0.049 to 1.929), TSH (β, 0.192; 95% CI, 0.027 to 0.357), and thyroglobulin Ab (0.657; 95% CI, 0.210 to 1.103) for ASM/height2; menopausal years (β, −3.112; 95% CI, −5.661 to −0.563) and ASM/height2 (β, 2.669; 95% CI, 1.073 to 4.265) for handgrip strength; and GNRI (β, 0.062; 95% CI, 0.019 to 0.105), T3 (β, −3.541; 95% CI, −7.019 to −0.063), and age (β, 0.043; 95% CI, 0.003 to 0.084) for gait speed. Our study confirmed a high prevalence of low skeletal muscle mass index in postmenopausal women with total thyroidectomy and revealed a number of determinants that could help early diagnosis and management this disease in daily clinical practice.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    48
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []