Pavol Michael J, Runtz Eileen F, Edwards Beatrice J, Pai Yi-Chung
Department of Physical Therapy, University of Illinois at Chicago, 60612, USA.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2002 Aug;57(8):M496-503. doi: 10.1093/gerona/57.8.m496.
Fall incidence in older adults might be reduced through learning to better recover from or adjust to perturbations. Extents of age-related declines and limitations in the ability to recover are not well established, however.
Slips were induced, using bilateral low-friction platforms, during a sit-to-stand task in 60 young and 41 older, healthy, safety-harnessed adults. Subjects underwent five slips, a block of nonslipping trials, then two reexposures to the slip. The first slip was novel and unexpected. Age-group and trial effects on fall incidence (evidenced by excessive hip descent) and on the direction of the initial protective step were examined.
More older than young adults fell upon the first slip (73% vs 28%; p <.001). With repeated exposure, fall incidence decreased at similar exponential rates in both age groups. All but one subject eventually learned to slip without falling, and two-thirds of fallers fell only once. Repeat fallers fell without stepping in 63% of falls. Upon later slip reexposure, more older than young adults fell (20% vs 2%), but fewer falls occurred than did originally (p =.001). Likelihoods of forward and backward stepping during successful recovery changed with repeated slip exposure and upon reexposure, but did not differ between age groups.
Older adults are more likely to fall upon initial, unexpected perturbation exposure, but, upon repeated exposure, healthy young and older adults rapidly learn to avoid falling at a similar rate. Healthy older adults appear fully capable of learning to better recover from or adjust to a perturbation through repeated exposure.
通过学习更好地从干扰中恢复或适应干扰,可能会降低老年人跌倒的发生率。然而,与年龄相关的能力下降程度以及恢复能力的局限性尚未得到充分证实。
在60名年轻和41名年长的、健康且系有安全带的成年人进行从坐到站任务期间,使用双侧低摩擦平台诱发滑倒。受试者经历五次滑倒、一组无滑倒试验,然后再次接触两次滑倒情况。第一次滑倒是新奇且意外的。研究了年龄组和试验对跌倒发生率(以过度的髋部下降为证据)以及初始保护性步向的影响。
在第一次滑倒时,年长成年人比年轻成年人跌倒的更多(73%对28%;p<.001)。随着反复接触,两个年龄组的跌倒发生率均以相似的指数率下降。除一名受试者外,所有受试者最终都学会了滑倒而不跌倒,三分之二的跌倒者仅跌倒一次。再次跌倒的人在63%的跌倒中没有迈步。在后来再次接触滑倒时,年长成年人比年轻成年人跌倒的更多(20%对2%),但跌倒次数比最初少(p=.001)。在成功恢复过程中向前和向后迈步的可能性随着反复接触滑倒和再次接触而改变,但年龄组之间没有差异。
年长成年人在首次意外接触干扰时更有可能跌倒,但在反复接触后,健康的年轻和年长成年人能以相似的速度迅速学会避免跌倒。健康的年长成年人似乎完全有能力通过反复接触来学习更好地从干扰中恢复或适应干扰。