Coordination exercise and postural stability in elderly people: Effect of Tai Chi Chuan
Autor: | Alice M. Wong, Fuk-Tan Tang, Yin-Chou Lin, Pong-Yeun Wong, Shih-Wei Chou |
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Rok vydání: | 2001 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Aging China medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent genetic structures medicine.medical_treatment Posture Physical Therapy Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation Physical medicine and rehabilitation medicine Humans Exercise physiology Child Dynamic balance Exercise Aged Balance (ability) Rehabilitation Proprioception Tai chi chuan Boxing Middle Aged Test (assessment) Cross-Sectional Studies Child Preschool Postural stability Physical therapy Female Psychology |
Zdroj: | Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 82:608-612 |
ISSN: | 0003-9993 |
Popis: | Wong AM, Lin Y-C, Chou S-W, Tang F-T, Wong P-Y. Coordination exercise and postural stability in elderly people: effect of Tai Chi Chuan. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2001;82:608-12. Objective: To evaluate the effects of coordination exercise on postural stability in older individuals by Chinese shadow boxing, Tai Chi Chuan (TCC). Design: Cross-sectional study. Setting: Research project in a hospital-based biomechanical laboratory. Participants: The TCC group ( n = 25) had been practicing TCC regularly for 2 to 35 years. The control group ( n = 14) included healthy and active older subjects. Intervention: Static postural stability test: progressively harder sequential tests with 6 combinations of vision (eyes open, eyes closed, sway-referenced) and support (fixed, sway-referenced); and dynamic balance test: 3 tests of weight shifting (left to right, forward-backward, multidirectional) at 3 speeds. Main Outcome Measures: Static and dynamic balance of Sensory Organization Testing (SOT) of the Smart Balance Master System. Results: In static postural control, the results showed no differences between the TCC or control group in the more simple conditions, but in the more complicated SOT (eyes closed with sway surface, sway vision with sway surface), the TCC group had significantly better results than the control group. The TCC group also had significantly better results in the rhythmic forward-backward weight-shifting test. Duration of practice did not seem to affect the stability of elder people. Conclusion: The elderly people who regularly practiced TCC showed better postural stability in the more challenged conditions than those who do not (eg, the condition with simultaneous disturbance of vision and proprioception). TCC as a coordination exercise may reduce the risk of a fall through maintaining the ability of posture control. © 2001 by the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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