Mechanisms of limb collapse following a slip among young and older adults
Autor: | Feng Yang, Jason D. Wening, Michael J. Pavol, Yi-Chung Pai |
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Rok vydání: | 2006 |
Předmět: |
Adult
musculoskeletal diseases Aging medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent Knee Joint Knee flexion Biomedical Engineering Biophysics Walking Slip (materials science) Humans Medicine Eccentric Orthopedics and Sports Medicine Gait Postural Balance Aged Aged 80 and over Leg Knee extensors business.industry Rehabilitation Joint moment Physical therapy Accidental Falls Female Hip Joint business |
Zdroj: | Journal of Biomechanics. 39:2194-2204 |
ISSN: | 0021-9290 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2005.07.004 |
Popis: | Recovery from a large perturbation, such as a slip, can be successful when stability of movement can be reestablished with protective stepping. Nevertheless, one dilemma for executing a protective step is that its liftoff can weaken support against limb collapse. This study investigated whether failures in limb support leading to falls after a protective step result from insufficient joint moment generation, and whether such insufficiency is greater among older fallers. A novel, unexpected slip was induced immediately following seat-off during a sit-to-stand. Joint work and mechanical energy were calculated for 43 young (9 falls, 34 recoveries) and 22 older (13 falls, 9 recoveries) adults who responded with a protective step. Comparisons of the work produced at three joints of the bilateral lower limbs revealed that insufficient concentric knee and hip extensor work prior to step liftoff was a primary differentiating factor between falling and recovery, regardless of age. Also, during stepping, fallers regardless of age failed to limit the eccentric knee extensor work at their stance limb sufficiently to retard rapid knee flexion and the consequent potential energy loss. We concluded that young and older fallers had comparable weak limb support. The greater fall incidence among the older adults likely resulted from a greater proportion of subjects who responded to the slip with insufficient knee extensor support, possibly attributable to age-differences in chair-rising. One strategy to address this dilemma may rely on task-specific training to enhance feedforward control that improves movement stability, and thus lessens the reliance on protective stepping. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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