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Journal Article

Citation

Reelick MF, van Iersel MB, Kessels RP, Rikkert MG. Age Ageing 2009; 38(4): 435-440.

Affiliation

Department of Geriatrics, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, The Netherlands.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/ageing/afp066

PMID

19451658

Abstract

BACKGROUND: fear of falling (FoF) has great impact on functioning and quality of life of older people, but its effects on gait and balance are largely unknown. METHODS: we examined FoF in 100 participants aged >/= 75 years, using the Activities-specific Balance Confidence scale. Participants with a mean score <67% were assigned to the FoF group. We quantified gait and balance during walking at the preferred velocity with and without a cognitive dual task (arithmetic task and verbal fluency), using an electronic walkway (Gaitrite(R)) and a trunk accelerometer (SwayStar(R)). Primary outcome measures were gait velocity, stride-length and stride-time variability, as well as mediolateral angular displacement and velocity. RESULTS: gait velocity was significantly lower (P < 0.05) and stride-length and stride-time variability were significantly higher (P < 0.05) in the FoF group. However, after standardisation for gait velocity, differences became non-significant. Mediolateral angular displacement and velocity were not associated with FoF. We found no difference between the FoF and no-FoF group with respect to the dual-task effect on gait and balance variables. CONCLUSIONS: the lower gait velocity in the FoF group may be a useful adaptation to optimise balance, rather than a sign of decreased balance control. The ability to attend to a secondary task during walking is not influenced by FoF.


Language: en

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