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Featured researches published by Birgit Linkohr.
Zeitschrift Fur Gerontologie Und Geriatrie | 2011
Annette Peters; Angela Döring; Karl Heinz Ladwig; Christa Meisinger; Birgit Linkohr; Christine S. Autenrieth; S.E. Baumeister; J. Behr; A. Bergner; Horst Bickel; M. Bidlingmaier; André Dias; Rebecca T. Emeny; B. Fischer; Eva Grill; Lukas Gorzelniak; Hänsch H; S. Heidbreder; Margit Heier; Alexander Horsch; D. Huber; Rudolf M. Huber; Rudolf A. Jörres; Stefan Kääb; Stefan Karrasch; I. Kirchberger; G. Klug; B. Kranz; B. Kuch; Maria Elena Lacruz
BACKGROUND The objective of the KORA-Age research consortium is to assess the determinants and consequences of multimorbidity in the elderly and to look into reasons for successful aging in the general public. PATIENTS AND METHODS In the KORA-Age cohort study 9,197 persons were included who where born in the year 1943 or before and participants of previous KORA cohort studies conducted between 1984 and 2001 (KORA: Cooperative Health Research in the Region of Augsburg). The randomized intervention study KORINNA (Coronary infarct follow-up treatment in the elderly) tested a nurse-based case management program with 338 patients with myocardial infarct and included an evaluation in health economics. RESULTS A total of 2,734 deaths were registered, 4,565 participants submitted a postal health status questionnaire and 4,127 participants were interviewed by telephone (response 76.2% and 68.9% respectively). A gender and age-stratified random sample of the cohort consisting of 1,079 persons took part in a physical examination (response 53.8%). CONCLUSION The KORA-Age consortium was able to collect data in a large population-based sample and is contributing to the understanding of multimorbidity and successful aging.
Zeitschrift Fur Gerontologie Und Geriatrie | 2011
Annette Peters; Angela Döring; Karl Heinz Ladwig; Christa Meisinger; Birgit Linkohr; Christine S. Autenrieth; S.E. Baumeister; J. Behr; A. Bergner; Horst Bickel; M. Bidlingmaier; André Dias; Rebecca T. Emeny; Birgit Fischer; Eva Grill; Lukas Gorzelniak; Hänsch H; S. Heidbreder; Margit Heier; Alexander Horsch; D. Huber; Rudolf M. Huber; Rudolf A. Jörres; Stefan Kääb; Stefan Karrasch; I. Kirchberger; G. Klug; B. Kranz; B. Kuch; Maria Elena Lacruz
BACKGROUND The objective of the KORA-Age research consortium is to assess the determinants and consequences of multimorbidity in the elderly and to look into reasons for successful aging in the general public. PATIENTS AND METHODS In the KORA-Age cohort study 9,197 persons were included who where born in the year 1943 or before and participants of previous KORA cohort studies conducted between 1984 and 2001 (KORA: Cooperative Health Research in the Region of Augsburg). The randomized intervention study KORINNA (Coronary infarct follow-up treatment in the elderly) tested a nurse-based case management program with 338 patients with myocardial infarct and included an evaluation in health economics. RESULTS A total of 2,734 deaths were registered, 4,565 participants submitted a postal health status questionnaire and 4,127 participants were interviewed by telephone (response 76.2% and 68.9% respectively). A gender and age-stratified random sample of the cohort consisting of 1,079 persons took part in a physical examination (response 53.8%). CONCLUSION The KORA-Age consortium was able to collect data in a large population-based sample and is contributing to the understanding of multimorbidity and successful aging.
Preventive Medicine | 2015
Susanne Vogt; Siona Decke; Tonia de las Heras Gala; Birgit Linkohr; Wolfgang Koenig; Karl-Heinz Ladwig; Annette Peters; Barbara Thorand
OBJECTIVE To assess the prospective association of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] levels with frailty status and all-cause mortality in a cohort of community-dwelling participants of the population-based KORA [Cooperative Health Research in the Region of Augsburg]-Age Study. METHODS 727 non-frail participants, aged ≥65years, with 25(OH)D measurement at baseline in 2009, were followed for 2.9±0.1years. Participants were classified as pre-frail or frail if they met 1-2 or ≥3, respectively, of the following five criteria: weight loss, exhaustion, physical inactivity, low walking speed, weakness. The association between 25(OH)D and mortality was assessed in 954 participants. Multivariable adjusted logistic regression models were calculated for each outcome. RESULTS The incidence of pre-frailty and frailty was 21.2% and 3.9% respectively. After multivariable adjustment, participants with very low 25(OH)D levels (<15ng/ml vs. ≥30ng/ml) had a significantly higher odds for pre-frailty (OR=2.43 [95% CI: 1.17-5.03]) and pre-frailty/frailty combined (OR=2.53 [95% CI: 1.23-5.22]), but not for frailty alone (OR=2.63 [95% CI: 0.39-17.67]). The association between 25(OH)D and mortality (OR=3.39 [95% CI: 1.08-10.65]) was partly mediated by frailty status. CONCLUSION Very low 25(OH)D levels were independently associated with incident pre-frailty, pre-frailty/frailty combined and all-cause mortality.
European Journal of Public Health | 2014
Martin J. Mueller; Ralf Strobl; Klaus Jahn; Birgit Linkohr; Annette Peters; Eva Grill
BACKGROUND Complaints of vertigo and dizziness are common in primary care in the aged. They can be caused by distinct vestibular disorders, but can also be a symptom in other conditions like non-vestibular sensory loss, vascular encephalopathy or anxiety. The aim of this study was to investigate the specific contribution of vertigo and dizziness to the total burden of disability in aged persons when controlling for the presence of other health conditions. METHODS Data originate from the MONICA/KORA study, a population-based cohort. Survivors of the original cohorts who were 65 years and older were examined by telephone interview in 2009. Disability was assessed with the Health Assessment Questionnaire. Logistic regression was used to adjust for potential confounders and additive regression to estimate the contribution of vertigo and dizziness to disability prevalence. RESULTS Adjusted for age, sex and other chronic conditions, vertigo and dizziness were associated with disability (odds ratio 1.66, 95% confidence intervals 1.40-1.98). In both men and women between 65 and 79 years, vertigo and dizziness were among the strongest contributors to the burden of disability with a prevalence of 10.5% (6.6 to 15.1) in men and 9.0% (5.7 to 13.0) in women. In men, this effect is stable across all age-groups, whereas it decreases with age in women. CONCLUSIONS Vertigo and dizziness independently and relevantly contribute to population-attributable disability in the aged. They are not inevitable consequences of ageing but arise from distinct disease entities. Careful management of vertigo and dizziness might increase population health and reduce disability.
Diabetes | 2017
Fabian Bamberg; Holger Hetterich; Susanne Rospleszcz; Roberto Lorbeer; Sigrid Auweter; Christopher L. Schlett; Anina Schafnitzel; Christian Bayerl; Andreas Schindler; Tobias Saam; K. Müller-Peltzer; Wieland H. Sommer; Tanja Zitzelsberger; Jürgen Machann; Michael Ingrisch; Sonja Selder; Wolfgang Rathmann; Margit Heier; Birgit Linkohr; Christa Meisinger; Christian Weber; Birgit Ertl-Wagner; Steffen Massberg; Maximilian F. Reiser; Annette Peters
Detailed pathophysiological manifestations of early disease in the context of prediabetes are poorly understood. This study aimed to evaluate the extent of early signs of metabolic and cardio-cerebrovascular complications affecting multiple organs in individuals with prediabetes. Subjects without a history of stroke, coronary artery disease, or peripheral artery disease were enrolled in a case-control study nested within the Cooperative Health Research in the Region of Augsburg (KORA) FF4 cohort and underwent comprehensive MRI assessment to characterize cerebral parameters (white matter lesions, microbleeds), cardiovascular parameters (carotid plaque, left ventricular function, and myocardial late gadolinium enhancement [LGE]), and metabolic parameters (hepatic proton-density fat fraction [PDFF] and subcutaneous and visceral abdominal fat). Among 400 subjects who underwent MRI, 103 subjects had prediabetes and 54 had established diabetes. Subjects with prediabetes had an increased risk for carotid plaque and adverse functional cardiac parameters, including reduced early diastolic filling rates as well as a higher prevalence of LGE compared with healthy control subjects. In addition, people with prediabetes had significantly elevated levels of PDFF and total and visceral fat. Thus, subjects with prediabetes show early signs of subclinical disease that include vascular, cardiac, and metabolic changes, as measured by whole-body MRI after adjusting for cardiometabolic risk factors.
International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2013
Maria Elena Lacruz; Rebecca T. Emeny; Horst Bickel; Birgit Linkohr; Karl Heinz Ladwig
Test the feasibility of the modified telephone interview for cognitive status (TICS‐m) as a screening tool to detect cognitive impairment in a population‐based sample of older subjects.
Preventive Medicine | 2014
Ralf Strobl; Martin Müller; Barbara Thorand; Birgit Linkohr; Christine S. Autenrieth; Annette Peters; Eva Grill
OBJECTIVE Encouraging physical activity is an important public health measure to reduce disability prevalence in the aged. The aims of this study were to determine the association between midlife physical activity and late-life disability and to investigate gender-specific differences. METHOD This data originates from the KORA-Age cohort, a follow-up in 2008 of the MONICA (Multinational Monitoring of Trends and Determinants in Cardiovascular Diseases)/KORA (Cooperative Health Research in the Region of Augsburg) S1-S4 surveys (1984-2001) situated in Augsburg, a city in Southern Germany. We applied a multivariable hurdle model to investigate the association of physical activity and disability. RESULTS We analysed 3333 persons with a mean follow-up of 18±5.5 years. Using hurdle models, moderate activity and high activity had a protective effect on the occurrence of disability (OR (odds ratio)=0.80 and 0.73), but not on severity (i.e. number of limitations). We observed a strong gender-specific difference in this association, with men benefitting more from exercise. CONCLUSION Elevated physical activity reduces the risk of becoming disabled and postpones the onset of disability by several years, but we could not show an effect on the severity of disability. In addition, men seem to benefit more from leisure-time physical activity than women.
Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 2014
Nadine Röhrig; Ralf Strobl; Martin Müller; Siegfried Perz; Stefan Kääb; Eimo Martens; Annette Peters; Birgit Linkohr; Eva Grill
OBJECTIVES To examine the association between electrocardiographic (ECG) findings and disability status in older adults. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING KORA-Age, a population-based cross-sectional study of the MONICA/KORA project, a randomized sample from Southern Germany of people aged 65 years or older. RESULTS A total of 534 (51.5%) of 1,037 participants were characterized as disabled. Disabled participants were on average 4.5 years older than those who were not disabled. Crude associations of left-axis deviation, ventricular conduction defects, atrial fibrillation, and QT prolongation with disability status were significant (P < 0.05). In models controlled for age and sex, these effects remained constant except for QT prolongation. In the models adjusted for the minimal sufficient adjustment set (consisting of the variables sex, physical activity, age, obesity, diabetes, education, heart diseases, income, lung diseases, and stroke) identified by a directed acyclic graph (DAG), no significant association could be shown. CONCLUSION Associations between specific ECG findings and disability were found in unadjusted analysis and logistic models adjusted for age and sex. However, when adjusting for other possible confounders identified by the DAG, all these associations were no longer significant. It is important to adequately identify confounding in such settings.
Age and Ageing | 2016
Peter Reitmeir; Birgit Linkohr; Margit Heier; Sophie Molnos; Ralf Strobl; Holger Schulz; Michaela Breier; Theresa Faus; Dorothea M. Küster; Andrea Wulff; Harald Grallert; Eva Grill; Annette Peters; Jochen Graw
Abstract Purpose a population-based study in the region of Augsburg (Germany, KORA) was used to identify the prevalence of eye diseases and their risk factors in a sample of aged individuals. Methods data originated from the KORA-Age study collected in 2012 and 822 participants (49.6% women, 50.4% men, aged 68–96 years) were asked standardised questions about eye diseases. Positive answers were validated and specified by treating ophthalmologists. Additional information came from laboratory data. Polymorphic markers were tested for candidate genes. Results we received validations and specifications for 339 participants. The most frequent eye diseases were cataracts (299 cases, 36%), dry eyes (120 cases, 15%), glaucoma (72 cases, 9%) and age-related macular degeneration (AMD) (68 cases, 8%). Almost all participants suffering from glaucoma or from AMD also had cataracts. Cataract surgery was associated with diabetes (in men; OR = 2.24; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.11–4.53; P = 0.025) and smoking (in women; OR = 6.77; CI 1.62–28.35; P = 0.009). In men, treatments in airway diseases was associated with cataracts (glucocorticoids: OR = 5.29, CI 1.20–23.37; P = 0.028; sympathomimetics: OR = 4.57, CI 1.39–15.00; P = 0.012). Polymorphisms in two genes were associated with AMD (ARMS2: OR = 2.28, CI 1.48–3.51; P = 0.005; CFH: OR = 2.03, CI 1.35–3.06; P = 0.010). Conclusion combinations of eye diseases were frequent at old age. The importance of classical risk factors like diabetes, hypertension and airway diseases decreased either due to a survivor bias leaving healthier survivors in the older age group, or due to an increased influence of other up to now unknown risk factors.
Zeitschrift Fur Gerontologie Und Geriatrie | 2011
Annette Peters; Angela Döring; Karl Heinz Ladwig; Christa Meisinger; Birgit Linkohr; Christine S. Autenrieth; S.E. Baumeister; J. Behr; A. Bergner; Horst Bickel; M. Bidlingmaier; André Dias; Rebecca T. Emeny; Birgit Fischer; Eva Grill; Lukas Gorzelniak; Hänsch H; S. Heidbreder; Margit Heier; Alexander Horsch; D. Huber; Rudolf M. Huber; Rudolf A. Jörres; Stefan Kääb; Stefan Karrasch; I. Kirchberger; G. Klug; B. Kranz; B. Kuch; Maria Elena Lacruz
BACKGROUND The objective of the KORA-Age research consortium is to assess the determinants and consequences of multimorbidity in the elderly and to look into reasons for successful aging in the general public. PATIENTS AND METHODS In the KORA-Age cohort study 9,197 persons were included who where born in the year 1943 or before and participants of previous KORA cohort studies conducted between 1984 and 2001 (KORA: Cooperative Health Research in the Region of Augsburg). The randomized intervention study KORINNA (Coronary infarct follow-up treatment in the elderly) tested a nurse-based case management program with 338 patients with myocardial infarct and included an evaluation in health economics. RESULTS A total of 2,734 deaths were registered, 4,565 participants submitted a postal health status questionnaire and 4,127 participants were interviewed by telephone (response 76.2% and 68.9% respectively). A gender and age-stratified random sample of the cohort consisting of 1,079 persons took part in a physical examination (response 53.8%). CONCLUSION The KORA-Age consortium was able to collect data in a large population-based sample and is contributing to the understanding of multimorbidity and successful aging.