Description | Background: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) enables direct measurements of muscle volume and quality, allowing for an in-depth understanding of their associations with anthropometric traits, and health conditions. However, it is unclear which muscle measurements: total muscle volume, regional measurements or measurements of muscle quality, such as intermuscular adipose tissue (IMAT) or proton density fat fraction (PDFF), are most informative to detect changes and associations with relevant health outcomes such as sarcopenia and frailty. Methods: We developed a pipeline to automatically segment and extract image-derived phenotypes (IDPs) including total and regional muscle volumes and measures of muscle quality, and applied it to the neck-to-knee Dixon images in 44,520 UK Biobank participants. We also segmented paraspinal muscle from 2D quantitative MRI to quantify muscle PDFF and iron concentration. We performed linear regression to assess associations with anthropometric and lifestyle factors. We further applied logistic regression to investigate the association between these IDPs and sarcopenia and frailty. Results: All muscle measurements were negatively associated with age, waist-to-hip ratio, and Townsend deprivation index while they were positively associated with body mass index, alcohol intake, hand grip strength, physical activity and were significantly higher in men. Additionally, IMAT, (corrected for muscle volume) and paraspinal muscle PDFF were significantly higher in female compared with male participants. Sarcopenia was associated with reduced muscle volume, while frailty was associated with increased IMAT and paraspinal PDFF. Conclusions: Our fully automated method enables the quantification of muscle volumes and quality suitable for large population-based studies. While the choice of muscle measurements is important particularly when investigating associations with health conditions, most provide consistent differences relating to the detection of age, sex, body composition and lifestyle changes on muscularity. |
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