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DOI: 10.1002/jcsm.12112
¤ OpenAccess: Gold
This work has “Gold” OA status. This means it is published in an Open Access journal that is indexed by the DOAJ.

Reference ranges of handgrip strength from 125,462 healthy adults in 21 countries: a prospective urban rural epidemiologic (PURE) study

Darryl P. Leong,Koon Teo,Sumathy Rangarajan,V Raman Kutty,Fernando Lanas,Hui Chen,Qiaojun Xiang,Qian Zhang,Jinhua Tang,Noorhassim Ismail,Khalid F. AlHabib,Sarah Moss,Annika Rosengren,Ayşe Akalın,Omar Rahman,Jephat Chifamba,Andrés Orlandini,Rajesh Kumar,Karen Yeates,Rajeev Gupta,Afzalhussein Yusufali,Antonio Dans,Álvaro Avezum,Patricio López‐Jaramillo,Paul Poirier,Hosein Heidari,Katarzyna Zatońska,Romaina Iqbal,Rasha Khatib,Salim Yusuf

Percentile
Demography
Ethnic group
2016
Abstract Background The measurement of handgrip strength (HGS) has prognostic value with respect to all‐cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality and cardiovascular disease, and is an important part of the evaluation of frailty. Published reference ranges for HGS are mostly derived from Caucasian populations in high‐income countries. There is a paucity of information on normative HGS values in non‐Caucasian populations from low‐ or middle‐income countries. The objective of this study was to develop reference HGS ranges for healthy adults from a broad range of ethnicities and socioeconomically diverse geographic regions. Methods HGS was measured using a Jamar dynamometer in 125,462 healthy adults aged 35‐70 years from 21 countries in the Prospective Urban Rural Epidemiology (PURE) study. Results HGS values differed among individuals from different geographic regions. HGS values were highest among those from Europe/North America, lowest among those from South Asia, South East Asia and Africa, and intermediate among those from China, South America, and the Middle East. Reference ranges stratified by geographic region, age, and sex are presented. These ranges varied from a median (25 th –75 th percentile) 50 kg (43–56 kg) in men <40 years from Europe/North America to 18 kg (14–20 kg) in women >60 years from South East Asia. Reference ranges by ethnicity and body‐mass index are also reported. Conclusions Individual HGS measurements should be interpreted using region/ethnic‐specific reference ranges.
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    Reference ranges of handgrip strength from 125,462 healthy adults in 21 countries: a prospective urban rural epidemiologic (PURE) study” is a paper by Darryl P. Leong Koon Teo Sumathy Rangarajan V Raman Kutty Fernando Lanas Hui Chen Qiaojun Xiang Qian Zhang Jinhua Tang Noorhassim Ismail Khalid F. AlHabib Sarah Moss Annika Rosengren Ayşe Akalın Omar Rahman Jephat Chifamba Andrés Orlandini Rajesh Kumar Karen Yeates Rajeev Gupta Afzalhussein Yusufali Antonio Dans Álvaro Avezum Patricio López‐Jaramillo Paul Poirier Hosein Heidari Katarzyna Zatońska Romaina Iqbal Rasha Khatib Salim Yusuf published in 2016. It has an Open Access status of “gold”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.