Suppr超能文献

社区居住的老年人在进行 6 周侧身行走干预后,跌倒风险相关结局得到改善:一项可行性和初步研究。

Risk-of-falling related outcomes improved in community-dwelling older adults after a 6-week sideways walking intervention: a feasibility and pilot study.

机构信息

Department of Biomechanics and Center for Research in Human Movement Variability, University of Nebraska at Omaha, Biomechanics Research Building 214, 6160 University Drive South, 68182-0860, NE, Omaha, USA.

College of Public Health, University of Nebraska Medical Center, 68198-4355, Omaha, NE, USA.

出版信息

BMC Geriatr. 2021 Jan 14;21(1):60. doi: 10.1186/s12877-021-02010-6.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Aging increases fall risk and alters gait mechanics and control. Our previous work has identified sideways walking as a potential training regimen to decrease fall risk by improving frontal plane control in older adults' gait. The purposes of this pilot study were to test the feasibility of sideways walking as an exercise intervention and to explore its preliminary effects on risk-of-falling related outcomes.

METHODS

We conducted a 6-week single-arm intervention pilot study. Participants were community-dwelling older adults ≥ 65 years old with walking ability. Key exclusion criteria were neuromusculoskeletal and cardiovascular disorders that affect gait. Because initial recruitment rate through University of Nebraska at Omaha and Omaha community was slower than expected (3 participants∙week), we expanded the recruitment pool through the Mind & Brain Health Labs registry of the University of Nebraska Medical Center. Individualized sideways walking intervention carried out under close supervision in a 200 m indoor walking track (3 days∙week). Recruitment and retention capability, safety, and fidelity of intervention delivery were recorded. We also collected (open-label) walking speed, gait variability, self-reported and performance-based functional measures to assess participants' risk-of-falling at baseline and post-intervention: immediate, and 6 weeks after the completion of the intervention.

RESULTS

Over a 7-month period, 42 individuals expressed interest, 21 assessed for eligibility (21/42), and 15 consented to participate (15/21). Most of the potential participants were reluctant to commit to a 6-week intervention. Desired recruitment rate was achieved after revising the recruitment strategy. One participant dropped out (1/15). Remaining participants demonstrated excellent adherence to the protocol. Participants improved on most outcomes and the effects remained at follow-up. No serious adverse events were recorded during the intervention.

CONCLUSIONS

Our 6-week sideways walking training was feasible to deliver and demonstrated strong potential as an exercise intervention to improve risk-of-falling outcomes in community-dwelling older adults. In a future trial, alternative clinical tools should be considered to minimize the presence of ceiling/floor effects. A future large trial is needed to confirm sideways walking as a fall prevention intervention.

TRIAL REGISTRATION

ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT04505527 . Retrospectively registered 10 August 2020.

摘要

背景

衰老会增加跌倒风险,并改变步态力学和控制。我们之前的工作已经确定侧向行走是一种潜在的训练方案,可以通过改善老年人步态的额状面控制来降低跌倒风险。本研究的目的是测试侧向行走作为一种锻炼干预的可行性,并探讨其对与跌倒相关的风险结果的初步影响。

方法

我们进行了一项为期 6 周的单臂干预性试点研究。参与者为具有行走能力的社区居住的老年人,年龄≥65 岁。主要排除标准为影响步态的神经肌肉骨骼和心血管疾病。由于通过内布拉斯加大学奥马哈分校和奥马哈社区的初始招募率低于预期(每周 3 名参与者),我们通过内布拉斯加大学医学中心的 Mind & Brain Health Labs 登记册扩大了招募范围。在 200 米室内步行道上进行个体化的侧向行走干预,由密切监督(每周 3 天)。记录招募和保留能力、干预的安全性和交付的保真度。我们还收集了(开放标签)行走速度、步态变异性、自我报告和基于表现的功能测量结果,以评估参与者在基线和干预后的跌倒风险:即时和干预完成后 6 周。

结果

在 7 个月的时间里,有 42 人表示有兴趣,21 人符合条件(21/42),15 人同意参加(15/21)。大多数潜在参与者都不愿意承诺进行 6 周的干预。修改了招募策略后,达到了预期的招募率。一名参与者退出(1/15)。其余参与者对方案的依从性极好。参与者在大多数结果上都有所改善,并且效果在随访中仍然存在。在干预期间没有记录到严重的不良事件。

结论

我们的 6 周侧向行走训练是可行的,并且作为一种锻炼干预措施,在改善社区居住的老年人跌倒风险结果方面具有很大的潜力。在未来的试验中,应该考虑替代临床工具来最小化天花板/地板效应的存在。需要进行未来的大型试验来确认侧向行走作为一种预防跌倒的干预措施。

试验注册

ClinicalTrials.gov 标识符:NCT04505527。2020 年 8 月 10 日回顾性注册。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/4c74/7809866/bf0e9e57dee9/12877_2021_2010_Fig1_HTML.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验