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Mediolateral Margin of Stability highlights motor strategies for maintaining dynamic balance in older adults.

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  • معلومة اضافية
    • نبذة مختصرة :
      The dynamical nature of gait increases fall risk for older adults as the Center of Mass (COM) is constantly displaced inside and outside the Base of Support (BOS). Foot placement and leg joint moments are the primary mechanisms controlling dynamic balance. The Margin of Stability (MOS) quantifies the distance between the COM dynamical state and the BOS. While research examined how aging affects the relationship between foot placement and MOS, the relationship to leg moments is unexamined. Examining this relationship would elucidate whether aging increases fall risk from changes in the joint moments controlling the COM. Fourteen older (66.9 ± 4.3 years) and sixteen young (26.3 ± 3.6 years) adults walked along a 12m path for three trials. The MOS, hip and ankle moments in sagittal and frontal planes were analyzed. For the knee, only the sagittal plane was analyzed. MOS was calculated as the distance between the extrapolated-COM and the Center of Pressure per step. Statistical Parametric Mapping independent t-tests assessed group differences. Cross-correlation quantified MOS and joint moment relationships per plane during single-stance. No group differences in walking speed were observed. A larger frontal plane MOS, hip abduction and ankle eversion moment occurred for older adults. Cross-correlation demonstrated moderate and strong relationships for the hip-MOS for both groups in the sagittal plane. Older adults had a larger sagittal plane hip-MOS correlation than young adults. The larger mediolateral MOS in older adults may indicate attempts to avoid lateral balance loss by shifting their COM away from their BOS lateral boundaries during single-stance. However, this strategy moves the COM toward the BOS medial borders potentially pre-maturely terminating the contralateral swing phase during medial destabilization. The stronger sagittal plane hip-MOS relationship in older adults may reflect increased coupling between hip moments and the COM to control dynamic balance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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