Older folk who pick up the pace may be adding years to their life  
If you want to know how long grandpa is  going to live, check his pace of walking. A report appearing in the  Journal of the American Medical Association found a strong correlation  between walking speed and expected survival rates for persons over 65.
The analysis from nine studies between  1986 and 2000 showed faster walking speed among older adults was  associated with increased length of survival.
The average gait speed of the 34,485  participants was 0.92m per second. But analysing results over periods  from six to 21 years, the University of Pittsburgh researchers found the  faster ones lived longer.
"Walking requires energy, movement  control and support, and places demands on multiple organ systems,  including the heart, lungs, circulatory, nervous and musculoskeletal  systems," the researchers wrote.
"Slowing gait may reflect both damaged systems and a high energy cost of walking."
All studies had participants walk at  their usual pace and from a standing start. The walk distance varied  from 2.4m to six metres.
"Predicted years of remaining life for each sex and age increased as gait speed increased," the researchers said.
"Gait speeds of one metre per second or  higher consistently demonstrated survival that was longer than expected  by age and sex alone. In this older adult population, the relationship  of gait speed with remaining years of life was consistent across age  groups."
The researchers found that gait speed  was associated with differences in the probability of survival at all  ages in both sexes, but was especially notable after age 75.
"The data provided herein are intended  to aid clinicians, investigators and health system planners who seek  simple indicators of health and survival in older adults," said  researchers headed by Pittsburgh’s Stephanie Studenski.
"Gait speed has potential to be  implemented in practice, using a stopwatch and a four-metre course. Gait  speed may be a simple and accessible indicator of the health of the  older person."
In an editorial accompanying the report,  Matteo Cesari of the Universita Campus Bio-Medico in Rome said that  because no evidence definitively supports the hypothesis that gait speed  improvements are associated with better health-related outcomes, gait  speed should not be considered as a primary target for interventions at  present.
"It represents a global marker of health  status, and an optimal secondary and complementary outcome to support  research findings, clinical decisions or both aimed at modifying more  pragmatic end points," he wrote.
"Future research will be needed to  determine whether gait speed has the potential to change the way in  which a patient is defined as geriatric." 
Source: AFP-Relaxnews
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