Shkuratova Nataliya, Morris Meg E, Huxham Frances
School of Physiotherapy, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Melbourne, Australia.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2004 Apr;85(4):582-8. doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2003.06.021.
To determine the effects of aging on balance control during walking.
Two-group repeated-measures design.
Gait laboratory in Australia.
Convenience sample of 20 healthy older subjects (mean age, 72y) and 20 healthy young subjects (mean age, 24y).
Changes in locomotor performance in response to perturbations to balance were quantified for healthy older adults compared with healthy young adults for (1) straight line walking at preferred speed, (2) straight line walking at fast speed, (3) figure-of-eight walking at preferred speed, and (4) figure-of-eight walking while performing a secondary motor task.
Gait speed, stride length, cadence, and double-limb support duration, using a footswitch system.
Healthy older people screened for pathology had gait patterns comparable to young adults for straight line walking at preferred speed. However, multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) showed a significant interaction between age and speed when balance was perturbed by requiring subjects to change from walking at preferred to fast speeds (Pillai-Bartlett trace=.259, F(4,35)=3.06, P<.029, partial eta(2)=.259). This occurred because older people did not increase their speed (F(1,38)=7.65, P<.01, partial eta(2)=.168) or stride length (F(1,38)=12.23, P<.01, partial eta(2)=.243) as much as did the young adults. MANOVAs did not show statistically significant interactions between age and turning conditions or age and dual task conditions, although older people walked more slowly and with shorter steps when turning or performing a secondary task.
Balance strategies during gait are task specific and vary according to age. In response to challenges to balance imposed by the requirement to change from preferred to fast walking, older people did not increase their speed and stride length to the same extent as did younger adults. This was possibly a strategy to maintain their stability.
确定衰老对步行过程中平衡控制的影响。
两组重复测量设计。
澳大利亚的步态实验室。
20名健康老年受试者(平均年龄72岁)和20名健康青年受试者(平均年龄24岁)的便利样本。
将健康老年人与健康青年人在以下情况下因平衡受到干扰而导致的运动表现变化进行量化:(1)以偏好速度直线行走;(2)以快速直线行走;(3)以偏好速度走“8”字步;(4)在执行次要运动任务时走“8”字步。
使用脚踏开关系统测量步态速度、步幅、步频和双支撑持续时间。
经病理筛查的健康老年人在以偏好速度直线行走时,其步态模式与青年人相当。然而,多变量方差分析(MANOVA)显示,当要求受试者从偏好速度改为快速行走从而使平衡受到干扰时,年龄与速度之间存在显著交互作用(Pillai-Bartlett迹值 = 0.259,F(4,35) = 3.06,P < 0.029,偏η² = 0.259)。出现这种情况是因为老年人增加速度(F(1,38) = 7.65,P < 0.01,偏η² = 0.168)和步幅(F(1,38) = 12.23,P < 0.01,偏η² = 0.243)的幅度不如青年人。尽管老年人在转弯或执行次要任务时行走速度更慢且步幅更小,但MANOVA未显示年龄与转弯条件或年龄与双重任务条件之间存在统计学上的显著交互作用。
步态中的平衡策略是特定于任务的,并且会因年龄而异。为应对从偏好行走改为快速行走所带来的平衡挑战,老年人增加速度和步幅的幅度不如年轻人。这可能是一种维持稳定性的策略。