Singh Harshvardhan, Sanders Ozell, McCombe Waller Sandy, Bair Woei-Nan, Beamer Brock, Creath Robert A, Rogers Mark W
Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Science, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Science, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD; National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, MD.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2017 Oct;98(10):1955-1961. doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2017.05.006. Epub 2017 Jun 10.
To determine and compare gait speed during head-forward and side-to-side head-turn walking in individuals with lower versus greater lateral balance.
Cross-sectional study.
University research laboratory.
Older adults (N=93; 42 men, 51 women; mean age ± SD, 73 ± 6.08y) who could walk independently.
(1) Balance tolerance limit (BTL), defined as the lowest perturbation intensity where a multistep balance recovery pattern was first evoked in response to randomized lateral waist-pull perturbations of standing balance to the left and right sides, at 6 different intensities (range from level 2: 4.5-cm displacement at 180cm/s acceleration, to level 7: 22.5-cm displacement at 900cm/s acceleration); (2) gait speed, determined using an instrumented gait mat; (3) balance, evaluated with the Activities-specific Balance Confidence Scale; and (4) mobility, determined with the Timed Up and Go (TUG).
Individuals with low versus high BTL had a slower self-selected head-forward gait speed and head-turn gait speed (P=.002 and P<.001, respectively); the magnitude of difference was greater in head-turn gait speed than head-forward gait speed (Cohen's d=1.0 vs 0.6). Head-turn gait speed best predicted BTL. BTL was moderately and positively related (P=.003) to the ABC Scale and negatively related (P=.017) to TUG.
Head-turn gait speed is affected to a greater extent than head-forward gait speed in older individuals with poorer lateral balance and at greater risk of falls. Moreover, head-turn gait speed can be used to assess the interactions of limitations in lateral balance function and gait speed in relation to fall risk in older adults.
确定并比较侧向平衡能力较低与较高的个体在头部前倾和头部左右转动行走时的步速。
横断面研究。
大学研究实验室。
能够独立行走的老年人(N = 93;42名男性,51名女性;平均年龄±标准差,73±6.08岁)。
(1) 平衡耐受极限(BTL),定义为在对站立平衡进行左右两侧随机侧向腰部牵拉扰动时,首次引发多步平衡恢复模式的最低扰动强度,共有6种不同强度(范围从2级:180cm/s加速度下4.5厘米位移,到7级:900cm/s加速度下22.5厘米位移);(2) 使用仪器化步态垫测定步速;(3) 用特定活动平衡信心量表评估平衡能力;(4) 用计时起立行走测试(TUG)测定活动能力。
BTL较低与较高的个体,其自行选择的头部前倾步速和头部转动步速较慢(分别为P = 0.002和P < 0.001);头部转动步速的差异幅度大于头部前倾步速(科恩d值 = 1.0对0.6)。头部转动步速最能预测BTL。BTL与ABC量表呈中度正相关(P = 0.003),与TUG呈负相关(P = 0.017)。
在侧向平衡较差且跌倒风险较高的老年人中,头部转动步速比头部前倾步速受影响程度更大。此外,头部转动步速可用于评估老年人侧向平衡功能限制与步速之间的相互作用及其与跌倒风险的关系。