TABLE 2.
PULMONARY FUNCTION, MUSCLE STRENGTH, AND INCIDENT MOBILITY DISABILITY
| Model | Pulmonary Function (HR [95% CI] P Value) | Respiratory Muscle Strength (HR [95% CI] P Value) | Leg Strength (HR [95% CI] P Value) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Model A | 0.627 (0.506, 0.776) | ||
| P < 0.001 | |||
| Model B | 0.642 (0.526, 0.783) | ||
| P < 0.001 | |||
| Model C | 0.692 (0.564, 0.849) | ||
| P < 0.001 | |||
| Model D | 0.695 (0.557, 0.868) | 0.700 (0.569, 0.861) | |
| P = 0.001 | P < 0.001 | ||
| Model E | 0.667 (0.537, 0.828) | 0.742 (0.602, 0.915) | |
| P < 0.001 | P = 0.005 | ||
| Model F | 0.682 (0.556, 0.837) | 0.759 (0.617, 0.934) | |
| P < 0.001 | P = 0.009 | ||
| Model G | 0.721 (0.577, 0.902) | 0.732 (0.593, 0.905) | 0.791 (0.640, 0.976) |
| P = 0.004 | P = 0.004 | P = 0.029 | |
| Model H | 0.793 (0.627 1.004) | 0.692(0.557, 0.860) | 0.781 (0.631, 0.966) |
| P = 0.054 | P < 0.001 | P = 0.023 |
The hazard ratios for the one unit difference in pulmonary function, respiratory muscle strength, and leg strength are summarized for a series of discrete-time proportional hazards models for time to incident motor disability, which were all adjusted for age, sex, and education. Each model includes additional terms for various combinations of pulmonary function, respiratory muscle strength, and leg strength as follows. Model A included a term for pulmonary alone; Model B included a term for respiratory muscle strength alone; Model C included a term for leg strength alone; Model D included terms for pulmonary function and respiratory muscle strength; Model E included terms for pulmonary function and leg strength; Model F included terms for respiratory muscle strength and leg strength; and Model G included terms for pulmonary function, respiratory muscle strength, and leg strength. Model H includes all the terms in Model G as well as terms for body mass index (BMI), BMI*BMI, physical activity, vascular risk factors, and vascular diseases.