Afschrift Maarten, van Deursen Robert, De Groote Friedl, Jonkers Ilse
Human movement sciences, KU Leuven, Belgium.
School of Healthcare Sciences, Cardiff University, UK.
Gait Posture. 2019 Feb;68:575-582. doi: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2019.01.010. Epub 2019 Jan 9.
The influence of aging on reactive control of balance during walking has been mainly investigated in the sagittal plane, whereas balance control in response to frontal plane perturbations is largely unexplored in the elderly. This is remarkable, given that walking mainly requires active control in the frontal plane. An extensive gait perturbation protocol was used to test whether reactive control of walking balance changes with aging and whether these changes are more pronounced in the frontal than in the sagittal plane.
Do alterations in reactive muscle activity cause an age-related shift in stepping strategy in response to perturbations in the frontal and sagittal planes during walking?
A treadmill-based perturbation protocol imposed frontal and sagittal plane perturbations of different magnitudes during different phases of the gait cycle. Motion capture and electromyography measured the response to the different perturbations in a group of eighteen young and ten older adults.
Only for a small subset of the perturbations, reactive muscle activity and kinematic strategies differed between young and older subjects. When perturbation magnitude increased, the older adults relied more on a stepping strategy for inward directed frontal plane perturbations and for sagittal plane perturbation just before heelstrike. Tibialis anterior activity increased less in the older compared to the young subjects. Using simulations, we related tibialis anterior activity to backward and outward movement of the center of pressure in the stance foot and confirmed its contribution to the ankle strategy. We concluded that deficient tibialis anterior activity predisposes elderly to use stepping rather than lateral ankle strategies to control balance.
Rehabilitation targets for fall prevention in elderly need to also focus on ankle muscle reactivity.
衰老对步行过程中平衡反应控制的影响主要在矢状面进行了研究,而老年人对额状面扰动的平衡控制在很大程度上尚未得到探索。鉴于步行主要需要在额状面进行主动控制,这一点值得关注。我们采用了一种广泛的步态扰动方案来测试步行平衡的反应控制是否会随着衰老而变化,以及这些变化在额状面是否比矢状面更明显。
在步行过程中,反应性肌肉活动的改变是否会导致与年龄相关的步幅策略变化,以应对额状面和矢状面的扰动?
基于跑步机的扰动方案在步态周期的不同阶段施加不同幅度的额状面和矢状面扰动。运动捕捉和肌电图测量了一组18名年轻人和10名老年人对不同扰动的反应。
仅在一小部分扰动中,年轻人和老年人的反应性肌肉活动和运动学策略存在差异。当扰动幅度增加时,老年人在应对向内的额状面扰动以及足跟即将触地前的矢状面扰动时,更多地依赖步幅策略。与年轻受试者相比,老年人胫前肌的活动增加较少。通过模拟,我们将胫前肌活动与支撑脚压力中心的向后和向外移动联系起来,并证实了其对踝关节策略的贡献。我们得出结论,胫前肌活动不足使老年人倾向于使用步幅策略而非外侧踝关节策略来控制平衡。
老年人预防跌倒的康复目标也需要关注踝关节肌肉的反应性。