Institute of Sport, Exercise & Health, Division of Surgery & Interventional Science, University College London, 170 Tottenham Court Road, W1T 7HA, London, UK.
Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, Musculoskeletal Science and Sports Medicine Research Centre, Manchester Metropolitan University, Oxford Road, M15 6BH, Manchester, UK; Department of Psychology, Health, Psychology and Communities Research Centre, Manchester Metropolitan University, Bonsall Street, M15 6GX, Manchester, UK.
Ageing Res Rev. 2022 Jan;73:101501. doi: 10.1016/j.arr.2021.101501. Epub 2021 Nov 6.
The aim of this systematic review was to synthesise all published evidence on associations between one-legged balance performance and falls.
Medline, EMBASE, CINAHL and Web of Science were systematically searched (to January 2021) to identify peer-reviewed, English language journal articles examining the association between one-legged balance performance and falls in community-dwelling adults.
Of 4310 records screened, 55 papers were included (n = 36954 participants). There was considerable heterogeneity between studies including differences in study characteristics, ascertainment of balance and falls, and analytical approaches. A meta-analysis of the time that individuals could maintain the one-legged balance position indicated that fallers had worse balance times than non-fallers (standardised mean difference: -0.29 (95%CI:-0.38,-0.20) in cross-sectional analyses; -0.19 (-0.28, -0.09) in longitudinal analyses), although there was no difference in the pooled median difference. Due to between-study heterogeneity, regression estimates between balance and fall outcomes could not be synthesised. Where assessed, prognostic accuracy indicators suggested that one-legged balance was a poor discriminator of fall risk; for example, 5 of 7 studies demonstrated poor prognostic accuracy (Area Under the Curve <0.6), with most studies demonstrating poor sensitivity.
This systematic review identified 55 papers that examined associations between balance and fall risk, the majority in older aged adults. However, the evidence was commonly of low quality and results were inconsistent. This contradicts previous perceptions of one-legged balance as a useful fall risk tool and highlights crucial gaps that must be addressed in order to translate such assessments to clinical settings.
本系统评价的目的是综合所有已发表的关于单腿平衡表现与跌倒之间关联的证据。
系统检索了 Medline、EMBASE、CINAHL 和 Web of Science(截至 2021 年 1 月),以确定同行评议的、以社区居住的成年人中单腿平衡表现与跌倒之间关联为主题的英文期刊文章。
在筛选出的 4310 条记录中,有 55 篇论文被纳入(n=36954 名参与者)。研究之间存在很大的异质性,包括研究特征、平衡和跌倒的确定以及分析方法的差异。对个体能够维持单腿平衡姿势的时间进行的 meta 分析表明,跌倒者的平衡时间比非跌倒者差(横断面分析中的标准化均数差:-0.29(95%CI:-0.38,-0.20);纵向分析中的-0.19(-0.28,-0.09)),但 pooled 中位数差异无差异。由于研究之间存在异质性,无法综合平衡和跌倒结果之间的回归估计。在评估的情况下,单腿平衡对跌倒风险的预测准确性指标表明,单腿平衡是一个较差的区分器;例如,7 项研究中有 5 项显示出较差的预后准确性(曲线下面积<0.6),大多数研究显示出较差的敏感性。
本系统评价确定了 55 篇研究单腿平衡与跌倒风险之间关联的论文,其中大多数涉及老年人群。然而,证据通常质量较低,结果不一致。这与以前将单腿平衡视为有用的跌倒风险工具的看法相矛盾,突出了为将此类评估转化为临床环境而必须解决的关键差距。