Background In older patients with polypharmacy and multiple comorbidities, even low grades of statin-associated muscle symptoms may have clinical implications. The aim of this study was therefore to investigate the potential associations between statin use and measures of physical performance and muscle function. Methods Participants were aged 70+, treated with at least seven regular systemic medications, and not expected to die or become institutionalized within 6 months. Physical performance measured as gait speed and Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB) score, and muscle function measured as grip strength, were compared between users and non-users of stati...
Objective The aim of the present study was to determine the risk of myopathy in older people receivi...
Background. Inflammatory biomarkers have shown consistent associations with disability and frailty i...
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the association of polypharmacy and physical performance measures in a sa...
Background: Statin therapy may cause myopathy, but long-term effects on physical function are unclea...
Objectives:A preserved ambulation is one of the keypoints for functionality and polypharmacy, a comm...
Background: statin drugs may induce skeletal myopathy, but might also have the potential to improve ...
Background: Statin therapy can cause myopathy, however it is unclear whether this exacerbates age-re...
Free to read\ud \ud Aims\ud \ud To investigate associations between HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor (sta...
Statins are widely used by older persons in primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular disea...
ObjectivesTo examine associations between angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor and statin m...
ObjectivesTo examine the association between statin use and objectively assessed decline in gait spe...
Background: Statin therapy in multimorbid older individuals with polypharmacy is controversial, part...
The purpose of this study was to examine whether physical activity (PA) and muscular strength (MS) a...
BackgroundInflammatory biomarkers have shown consistent associations with disability and frailty in ...
The objective was to examine whether: (1) statin use was associated with muscle related outcomes at ...
Objective The aim of the present study was to determine the risk of myopathy in older people receivi...
Background. Inflammatory biomarkers have shown consistent associations with disability and frailty i...
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the association of polypharmacy and physical performance measures in a sa...
Background: Statin therapy may cause myopathy, but long-term effects on physical function are unclea...
Objectives:A preserved ambulation is one of the keypoints for functionality and polypharmacy, a comm...
Background: statin drugs may induce skeletal myopathy, but might also have the potential to improve ...
Background: Statin therapy can cause myopathy, however it is unclear whether this exacerbates age-re...
Free to read\ud \ud Aims\ud \ud To investigate associations between HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor (sta...
Statins are widely used by older persons in primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular disea...
ObjectivesTo examine associations between angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor and statin m...
ObjectivesTo examine the association between statin use and objectively assessed decline in gait spe...
Background: Statin therapy in multimorbid older individuals with polypharmacy is controversial, part...
The purpose of this study was to examine whether physical activity (PA) and muscular strength (MS) a...
BackgroundInflammatory biomarkers have shown consistent associations with disability and frailty in ...
The objective was to examine whether: (1) statin use was associated with muscle related outcomes at ...
Objective The aim of the present study was to determine the risk of myopathy in older people receivi...
Background. Inflammatory biomarkers have shown consistent associations with disability and frailty i...
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the association of polypharmacy and physical performance measures in a sa...