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Journal Article

Citation

Taylor ME, Ketels MM, Delbaere K, Lord SR, Mikolaizak AS, Close JCT. Age Ageing 2012; 41(5): 665-669.

Affiliation

Neuroscience Research Australia, Falls and Balance Research Group, University of New South Wales, Randwick, NSW, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/ageing/afs057

PMID

22572239

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: to explore the associations between spatiotemporal gait parameters and falls in cognitively impaired older people and to investigate whether sensorimotor and neuropsychological factors mediate the association between gait performance and falls. DESIGN: prospective cohort study with a 1 year follow-up. SETTING: community-dwelling sample.Participants: sixty-four participants (62-96 years of age) with cognitive impairment. MEASUREMENTS: gait analysis and sensorimotor and neuropsychological functions were assessed in all participants. Falls were identified prospectively for 1 year. RESULTS: multiple fallers (≥2 falls) had significantly slower gait velocity, shorter stride length, greater double support time and increased step length variability in univariate analyses. Multivariate logistic regression indicated that the relationship between gait and falls was mediated primarily by sensorimotor function and to a lesser extent by neuropsychological performance. CONCLUSION: the findings indicate that slow and variable gait patterns increase the risk of falls in cognitively impaired older adults. Further, the association between gait and falls seems to be mediated in large by reduced sensorimotor functioning. Further research is needed to investigate whether interventions aimed at improving gait and/or sensorimotor fall risk factors, such as strength and balance, can prevent falls in cognitively impaired older adults.


Language: en

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