PT, FAPTA, Department of Physical Therapy & Rehabilitation Science, School of Medicine, University of Maryland, 100 Penn Street, Allied Health Building 205D, Baltimore, MD 21201.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2013 Dec;68(12):1540-8. doi: 10.1093/gerona/glt062. Epub 2013 May 17.
Falls leading to disability are common occurrences with advancing age. Stepping is a natural protective option for maintaining balance and preventing falls. There are directionally dependent challenges for protective stepping associated with falls among older individuals. The aim of this study was to determine the stepping response patterns evoked by different directions of externally applied postural disturbances in younger and older adults and in relation to falls.
Seventy-five community-dwelling adults were tested: 26 younger adults and 49 older adults. Fall history of older participants was tracked prospectively for 1 year after testing. Steps were randomly evoked in 12 directions by a motorized waist-pull system. The number of recovery steps, type of stepping strategy, and first step kinematic characteristics were determined.
Younger participants mainly used single recovery steps regardless of the perturbation direction. For the older groups, multiple steps occurred predominantly and were least for the forward-backward directions and greatest for the lateral directions. Trials with three or more recovery steps were increased laterally only for the fallers. Overall, fallers initiated stepping earliest, but other stepping characteristics were similar between the groups for forward-backward perturbations. Aging differences in stepping strategies for diagonal and lateral perturbations included numerous interlimb collisions. Adaptive changes in stepping characteristics between forward and lateral perturbations were also observed in relation to age and risk of falls.
These results indicated an age-associated reduction in balance recovery effectiveness through stepping particularly for the lateral direction among older individuals at greater risk for falls.
随着年龄的增长,导致残疾的跌倒事件很常见。跨步是维持平衡和防止跌倒的自然保护选择。老年人与跌倒相关的保护跨步存在方向依赖性挑战。本研究旨在确定年轻和老年成年人在不同方向的外部姿势干扰下诱发的跨步反应模式,并与跌倒相关。
测试了 75 名社区居住的成年人:26 名年轻成年人和 49 名老年成年人。对老年参与者的跌倒史进行了前瞻性跟踪,测试后 1 年内进行了跟踪。通过电动腰部牵引系统随机诱发 12 个方向的步幅。确定了恢复步幅的数量、跨步策略的类型以及第一步运动学特征。
年轻参与者主要使用单步恢复,无论干扰方向如何。对于老年组,主要发生多步,对于前后方向最少,对于侧向方向最大。对于跌倒者,只有侧向的试验才有三个或更多的恢复步幅。总体而言,跌倒者最早开始跨步,但对于前后方向的干扰,两组的其他跨步特征相似。对角和侧向干扰下的跨步策略与年龄相关的差异包括许多肢体间的碰撞。还观察到向前和侧向干扰之间的跨步特征与年龄和跌倒风险有关的适应性变化。
这些结果表明,随着年龄的增长,尤其是对于跌倒风险较高的老年人,通过跨步恢复平衡的效果会降低,尤其是在侧向方向。