Alhasan Hammad S
Department of Medical Rehabilitation Sciences, Faculty of Applied Medical Sciences, Umm Al-Qura University, Mecca 24382, Saudi Arabia.
J Clin Med. 2025 Sep 5;14(17):6266. doi: 10.3390/jcm14176266.
: Frailty is a multidimensional syndrome characterized by diminished physiological reserves, reduced mobility, and increased fall risk. While clinical assessments are commonly used to screen for frailty, they may not capture minor deficits in postural control. Center-of-pressure (CoP) metrics from force plates provide objective markers of postural control, yet their role in frailty screening remains underexplored. This study aimed to investigate the associations between functional performance measures and CoP-based metrics to identify predictors of frailty among older adults. : Eighty-three adults aged ≥ 55 years with a history of falls were classified as frail or pre-frail based on modified Fried criteria. Functional assessments (Timed Up and Go (TUG), grip strength, Berg Balance Scale [BBS], Falls Efficacy Scale [FES]) and CoP metrics (mean velocity, sway path; eyes open/closed) were evaluated. Both unadjusted and age-adjusted logistic regression models were used to identify independent predictors of frailty. : Increased TUG time and number of falls were the strongest risk factors for frailty, while increased sway path and CoP velocity were protective. In particular, sway path under eyes-closed conditions showed the strongest protective association (OR = 0.323, < 0.001). Additionally, fear of falling (OR = 1.078, = 0.013) emerged as a significant psychological factor, consistently associated with increased frailty risk regardless of physical performance. Correlation analysis supported these findings, showing that better functional performance was linked to lower frailty risk. : CoP sway path and mean velocity independently predict frailty status and offer added value beyond traditional clinical tools. These findings highlight the importance of incorporating instrumented balance assessments into frailty screening to capture nuanced postural control deficits and guide early intervention strategies.
衰弱是一种多维度综合征,其特征为生理储备减少、行动能力下降以及跌倒风险增加。虽然临床评估通常用于筛查衰弱,但它们可能无法捕捉到姿势控制方面的微小缺陷。来自测力板的压力中心(CoP)指标提供了姿势控制的客观标志物,但其在衰弱筛查中的作用仍未得到充分探索。本研究旨在调查功能表现测量指标与基于CoP的指标之间的关联,以确定老年人衰弱的预测因素。
83名年龄≥55岁且有跌倒史的成年人根据改良的Fried标准被分类为衰弱或衰弱前期。评估了功能评估(定时起立行走测试(TUG)、握力、伯格平衡量表[BBS]、跌倒效能量表[FES])和CoP指标(平均速度、摆动路径;睁眼/闭眼)。使用未调整和年龄调整的逻辑回归模型来确定衰弱的独立预测因素。
TUG时间增加和跌倒次数增加是衰弱的最强风险因素,而摆动路径增加和CoP速度具有保护作用。特别是,闭眼条件下的摆动路径显示出最强的保护关联(OR = 0.323,P < 0.001)。此外,害怕跌倒(OR = 1.078,P = 0.013)成为一个重要的心理因素,无论身体表现如何,都始终与衰弱风险增加相关。相关分析支持了这些发现,表明更好的功能表现与更低的衰弱风险相关。
CoP摆动路径和平均速度独立预测衰弱状态,并提供了超越传统临床工具的附加价值。这些发现强调了将仪器化平衡评估纳入衰弱筛查以捕捉细微的姿势控制缺陷并指导早期干预策略的重要性。