Maintain your muscle strength across the lifespan to prevent age-related diseases
News Medical - 10-Nov-2022The weaker the grip strength, the older is your biological age
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Associate Professor, Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation Research Non-Clinical Faculty
Dr. Peterson’s research focuses on understanding factors that influence health and life expectancy in persons with disabilities. Research in his lab occurs within a multidisciplinary and translational space that promotes greater understanding of issues in public health, clinical rehabilitation, human performance, and physiology. His specific research interests have been devoted to physical activity epidemiology and behavioral interventions for the treatment/prevention of obesity and related cardiometabolic diseases, frailty, functional motor declines, and early mortality. This includes research efforts directed at understanding and identifying precision strategies to prevent metabolic dysregulation and secondary musculoskeletal pathology among children and adults with neuromuscular impairments as well as a variety of frailty syndromes, and research to better understand health disparities among individuals with physical disabilities from the context of access to preventive care and community wellness.
Visit website: https://medicine.umich.edu/dept/pmr/mark-peterson-phd
See also: University of Michigan - Public Research university
Details last updated 13-Nov-2022
The weaker the grip strength, the older is your biological age