Department of Health Science, Institute of Human Movement Science, Faculty of Psychology and Human Movement Science, University of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
Ear Hear. 2018 Mar/Apr;39(2):337-343. doi: 10.1097/AUD.0000000000000489.
Adults with "hearing loss" have an increased falls risks. There may be an association between hearing impairment and walking performance under dual-task (DT) and triple-task (TT) conditions. The aim of this study was to identify DT and TT effects on walking speed, step length, and cadence in adults with hearing impairment, previous falls, and physical limitations.
The observational study included 73 community-dwelling older people seeking audiology services. Data were collected on sociodemographic characteristics, previous falls, fear of falling, physical limitations, and walking performance under three task conditions. Differences between the task conditions (single task [ST], DT, and TT) and the hearing groups were analyzed with a two-way ANOVA with repeated measures. The influence of fall risks and limited physical functioning on walking under ST, DT, and TT conditions was analyzed with ANOVAs, with ST, DT, and TT performance as repeated measurement factor (i.e., walking speed, step length and Cadence × Previous falls, or short physical performance battery <12 × Hearing Groups).
Walking speed was reduced accompanied by decreased step length and increased cadence in people with more severe hearing loss. Larger negative effects on DT and TT walking were found with increasing hearing loss (speed and cadence decreased with higher DT costs). Highest DT costs were found for the walking-manual conditions. These results were accompanied by small effects of older age and more comorbidities.
This first screening data of walking performance under different conditions for people with hearing loss warrants the need for development and investigation of training interventions to improve walking abilities. DT training may be beneficial to enhance motor and cognitive flexibility and to reduce fall risks.
有“听力损失”的成年人跌倒风险增加。听力障碍与双重任务(DT)和三重任务(TT)条件下的行走表现之间可能存在关联。本研究的目的是确定听力障碍、有过跌倒史和身体受限的成年人在进行 DT 和 TT 时对行走速度、步长和步频的影响。
本观察性研究纳入了 73 名寻求听力学服务的社区居住的老年人。收集了社会人口统计学特征、既往跌倒史、跌倒恐惧、身体限制以及在三种任务条件下的行走表现数据。使用双向重复测量方差分析分析任务条件(单任务[ST]、DT 和 TT)和听力组之间的差异。使用方差分析分析跌倒风险和有限的身体功能对 ST、DT 和 TT 条件下行走的影响,将 ST、DT 和 TT 表现作为重复测量因素(即行走速度、步长和步频×既往跌倒史,或短体适能电池<12×听力组)。
听力损失越严重,行走速度越慢,步长越短,步频越高。随着听力损失的增加,DT 和 TT 行走的负面影响更大(速度和步频随着 DT 成本的增加而降低)。行走-手动条件下的 DT 成本最高。这些结果伴随着年龄较大和合并症更多的小影响。
这是听力损失患者在不同条件下行走表现的首次筛查数据,需要开发和研究训练干预措施来提高行走能力。DT 训练可能有助于提高运动和认知灵活性,并降低跌倒风险。