
@article{ref1,
title="Timed up and go test and risk of falls in older adults: a systematic review",
journal="Journal of nutrition, health, and aging",
year="2011",
author="Beauchet, Olivier and Fantino, B. and Allali, Gilles and Muir, S. W. and Montero-Odasso, M. and Annweiler, C.",
volume="15",
number="10",
pages="933-938",
abstract="Objective: To assess the association and the predictive ability of the Timed Up and Go test (TUG) on the occurrence of falls among people aged 65 and older. Methods: A systematic English Medline literature search was conducted on November 30, 2009 with no limit of date using the following Medical Subject Heading (MeSH) terms &quot;Aged OR aged, 80 and over&quot; AND &quot;Accidental falls&quot; combined with the terms &quot;Timed Up and Go&quot; OR &quot;Get Up and Go&quot;. The search also included the Cochrane library and the reference lists of the retrieved articles. Results: Of the 92 selected studies, 11 met the selection criteria and were included in the final analysis. Fall rate ranged from 7.5 to 60.0% in the selected studies. The cut-off time separating non-fallers and fallers varied from 10 to 32.6 seconds. All retrospective studies showed a significant positive association between the time taken to perform the TUG and a history of falls with the highest odds ratio (OR) calculated at 42.3 [5.1 - 346.9]. In contrast, only one prospective study found a significant association with the occurrence of future falls. This association with incident falls was lower than in retrospective studies. Conclusions: Although retrospective studies found that the TUG time performance is associated with a past history of falls, its predictive ability for future falls remains limited. In addition, standardization of testing conditions combined with a control of the significant potential confounders (age, female gender and comorbidities) would provide better information about the TUG predictive value for future falls in older adults.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1279-7707",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}