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Publication year
2005Source
Journal of Neurophysiology, 94, 2, (2005), pp. 1158-68ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Cognitive Neuroscience
Neurology
Rehabilitation
Former Organization
Medical Physics and Biophysics
Journal title
Journal of Neurophysiology
Volume
vol. 94
Issue
iss. 2
Page start
p. 1158
Page end
p. 68
Subject
DCN 1: Perception and Action; UMCN 3.2 Cognitive Neurosciences; UMCN 3.2: Cognitive neurosciencesAbstract
Falls are a major problem in older adults. Many falls occur because of stumbling. The aim of the present study is to investigate stumbling reactions of older adults and to compare them with young adults. While subjects walked on a treadmill, a rigid obstacle unexpectedly obstructed the forward sway of the foot. In general, older adults used the same movement strategies as young adults ("elevating" and "lowering"). The electromyographic responses were categorized according to latencies: short-latency (about 45 ms, RP1), medium-latency (about 80 ms, RP2), and long-latency responses (about 110 ms, RP3; about 160 ms, RP4). Latencies of RP1 responses increased by about 6 ms and of RP2 by 10-19 ms in older adults compared with the young. Amplitudes of RP1 were similar for both age groups, whereas amplitudes of RP2-RP4 could differ. In the early-swing elevating strategy (perturbed foot directly lifted over the obstacle) older adults showed smaller responses in ipsilateral upper-leg muscles (biceps femoris and rectus femoris). This was related to shorter swing durations, more shortened step distances, and more failures in clearing the obstacle. In parallel, RP4 activity in the contralateral biceps femoris was enhanced, possibly pointing to a higher demand for trunk stabilization. In the late-swing lowering strategy (foot placed on the treadmill before clearing the obstacle) older adults showed lower RP2-RP3 responses in most muscles measured. However, kinematic responses were similar to those of the young. It is concluded that the changes in muscular responses in older adults induce a greater risk of falling after tripping, especially in early swing.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [238441]
- Electronic publications [122509]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [90373]
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