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Journal Article

Citation

Hosseinabadi M, Kamyab M, Azadinia F, Sarrafzadeh J. Prosthet. Orthot. Int. 2020; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0309364620923816

PMID

32507057

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hyperkyphosis may cause balance impairment in elderly people. Although the effectiveness of orthoses for improving balance in hyperkyphotic elderly people has received much attention, the mechanisms by which devices affect balance remain unknown.

OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to evaluate changes in balance performance, thoracic kyphosis angle, craniovertebral angle, back muscle endurance and joint position sense after 3 months of wearing a Spinomed orthosis. The study also included a secondary exploratory analysis to determine whether changes in any of the above-mentioned outcome measures can predict balance performance improvement in elderly people with hyperkyphosis.

STUDY DESIGN: Parallel group randomized controlled trial.

METHODS: In total, 44 hyperkyphotic elderly people were randomly allocated to an experimental group, who wore a Spinomed orthosis and a control group, who did not. No other treatment or change in physical activity was permitted during the study. A blinded assessor evaluated thoracic kyphosis angle, joint position sense, craniovertebral angle, back muscle endurance, Timed Up and Go Test time and Berg Balance Scale score at baseline and after 5, 9 and 13 weeks. All dependent variables were measured without the orthosis and analyzed separately using a 2 × 4 (time × group) mixed model analysis of variance. Based on the results of correlation analysis, thoracic kyphosis angle, back muscle endurance and joint position sense were selected as independent variables in a stepwise multiple regression model.

RESULTS: The two-way (group × time) interactions were significant in terms of Berg Balance Scale ...
[SafetyLit note: The results section of this abstract contains formulas, Greek characters, and math symbols presented, formatted, and rendered in non-standard ways by the publisher. No attempt was made to re-enter these characters and symbols in a way that SafetyLit readers may view this summary as intended by the authors. Any attempt to do so would certainly require a great amount of time but could also introduce errors. ]

CONCLUSION: Wearing a Spinomed orthosis for 3 months improved the posture, position sense and muscle performance of hyperkyphotic elderly people. Orthoses may improve balance performance by correcting spinal alignment and increasing proprioceptive information.


Language: en

Keywords

elderly; balance; forward head posture; muscle endurance; orthosis; position sense; Thoracic kyphosis

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