Hamed Azza, Bohm Sebastian, Mersmann Falk, Arampatzis Adamantios
Department of Training and Movement Sciences, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Philippstr. 13, Haus 11, 10115, Berlin, Germany.
Berlin School of Movement Science, Berlin, Germany.
Sports Med Open. 2018 Dec 13;4(1):56. doi: 10.1186/s40798-018-0170-z.
The risk of falling and associated injuries increases with age. Therefore, the prevention of falls is a key priority in geriatrics and is particularly based on physical exercising, aiming to improve the age-related decline in motor performance, which is crucial in response to postural threats. Although the benefits and specifications of effective exercise programs have been well documented in pre-post design studies, that is during the treatment, the definitive retention and transfer of these fall-related exercise benefits to the daily life fall risk during follow-up periods remains largely unclear. Accordingly, this meta-analysis investigates the efficacy of exercise interventions on the follow-up risk of falling.
A systematic database search was conducted. A study was considered eligible if it examined the number of falls (fall rate) and fallers (fall risk) of healthy older adults (≥ 65 years) during a follow-up period after participating in a randomized controlled physical exercise intervention. The pooled estimates of the fall rate and fall risk ratios were calculated using a random-effects meta-analysis. Furthermore, the methodological quality and the risk of bias were assessed.
Twenty-six studies with 31 different intervention groups were included (4739 participants). The number of falls was significantly (p <0.001) reduced by 32% (rate ratio 0.68, 95% confidence interval 0.58 to 0.80) and the number of fallers by 22% (risk ratio 0.78, 95% confidence interval 0.68 to 0.89) following exercising when compared with controls. Interventions that applied posture-challenging exercises showed the highest effects. The methodological quality score was acceptable (73 ± 11%) and risk of bias low.
The present review and meta-analysis provide evidence that physical exercise interventions have the potential to significantly reduce fall rate and risk in healthy older adults. Posture-challenging exercises might be particularly considered when designing fall prevention interventions.
跌倒及相关损伤的风险随年龄增长而增加。因此,预防跌倒在老年医学中是一个关键优先事项,尤其基于体育锻炼,旨在改善与年龄相关的运动能力下降,这对于应对姿势威胁至关重要。尽管有效运动计划的益处和具体内容在前后对照设计研究(即在治疗期间)中已有充分记录,但这些与跌倒相关的运动益处能否在随访期间明确保留并转化为日常生活中的跌倒风险,在很大程度上仍不明确。因此,本荟萃分析调查了运动干预对随访期间跌倒风险的疗效。
进行了系统的数据库检索。如果一项研究在健康老年人(≥65岁)参与随机对照体育锻炼干预后的随访期间,检查了跌倒次数(跌倒率)和跌倒者数量(跌倒风险),则该研究被认为符合条件。使用随机效应荟萃分析计算跌倒率和跌倒风险比的合并估计值。此外,评估了方法学质量和偏倚风险。
纳入了26项研究,有31个不同的干预组(4739名参与者)。与对照组相比,运动后跌倒次数显著减少(p<0.001)32%(率比0.68,95%置信区间0.58至0.80),跌倒者数量减少22%(风险比0.78,95%置信区间0.68至0.89)。应用具有姿势挑战性练习的干预显示出最高效果。方法学质量得分可接受(73±11%),偏倚风险较低。
本综述和荟萃分析提供了证据,表明体育锻炼干预有可能显著降低健康老年人的跌倒率和风险。在设计预防跌倒干预措施时,可能尤其应考虑具有姿势挑战性的练习。