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tent with both their baseline characteristics and their pro-
gressive loss in BCM and ADLs. The dose-response
relationship between the number of medications and the risk
of functional decline seems to reinforce the main role of
symptomatic diseases in the disablement process.
Finally, three limitations of the present study must be un-
derlined. First, our sample was made by a relatively small
number of older disabled nursing home residents. Not only
do the results need to be confirmed in larger samples, but
they also cannot be generalized to community-dwelling
older individuals. Second, we measured indirectly BCM by
BIA, and it is possible that age, sex, and other factors, in-
cluding hydration, could have led to over- or underestima-
tion of body compartments. Nevertheless, all the individuals
were clinically stable and had no evidence of acute illness at
the time of measurements. Furthermore, terminal patients
with cancer or severe liver and kidney disease were ex-
cluded. On the other hand, BIA is currently used to estimate
malnutrition in elderly individuals (28) and has been corre-
lated with other traditional methods, both in healthy sub-
jects and in patients with different diseases and nutritional
status (13,29,30). Third, we did not consider the new inci-
dental pathologies, which possibly appeared during the fol-
low-up. It is possible that, at least in some cases, a new dis-
ease might have caused a sudden worsening in functional
status with a consequent reduction in BCM.
In conclusion, the results of this longitudinal study sug-
gest that (i) signs of malnutrition seem to predict the wors-
ening in functional status in older disabled nursing home
residents and (ii) the BCM declines proportionally to the
loss in ADLs over time, suggesting the existence of a strong
relationship between BCM loss and the deterioration of
functional status in institutionalized older individuals. Nev-
ertheless, the underlying mechanism for such an association
has not been determined. Understanding whether the de-
cline in BCM is causally related to the decline of physical
function might provide important insight into the patho-
physiology of disability in older persons.
Acknowledgments
The first two authors (GZ and FR) contributed equally to this study.
Address correspondence to Prof. Renato Fellin, Istituto di Medicina In-
terna II, Universita’ degli Studi, via Savonarola no. 9, 44100 Ferrara, Italy.
E-mail: flr@ifeuniv.unife.it
27. Ferrucci L, Harris TB, Guralnik JM, et al. Serum IL-6 levels and the
development of disability in older persons. J Am Geriatr Soc. 1999;47:
639–646.
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Received September 14, 2000
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Accepted October 10, 2000
Decision Editor: John E. Morley, MB, BCh