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Journal Article

Citation

Lui KY, Hewston P, Deshpande N. Motor Control 2019; 23(1): 115-126.

Affiliation

1 Queen's University.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Human Kinetics Publishers)

DOI

10.1123/mc.2017-0045

PMID

30008245

Abstract

During sit-to-stand (STS), the vestibular system is highly stimulated in response to linear acceleration of the head and may play an important role, in addition to vision, for postural control. We examined the effects of aging on visual-vestibular interaction for postural control during STS in 15 young (22.5 ± 1.1 years) and 15 older (73.9 ± 5.3 years) participants. Vestibular information was manipulated using galvanic vestibular stimulation. Vision conditions involved normal (eyes open), suboptimal (blurring goggles), and no (eyes closed) vision. Older participants had significantly greater mediolateral peak-to-peak trunk roll (p = .025) and center of mass displacements (p < .001) than young participants. However, despite having greater mediolateral instability, older participants utilized similar strategies as young participants to overcome sensory perturbations during STS. Overall visual inputs were more dominantly used for mediolateral trunk control during STS than vestibular inputs.


Language: en

Keywords

functional performance; motion analysis; motor control

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