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Journal Article

Citation

Hoops ML, Rosenblatt NJ, Hurt CP, Crenshaw JR, Grabiner MD. Womens Health (Lond. Engl.) 2012; 8(6): 685-698.

Affiliation

Department of Kinesiology & Nutrition, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1919 W Taylor Street, Chicago, IL, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Future Medicine)

DOI

10.2217/whe.12.53

PMID

23181533

Abstract

The risk of falling reportedly increases almost 2.5-times in those with lower extremity osteoarthritis (OA(LE)) compared with age-matched controls. However, the mechanisms underlying the increased risk are not clear. The risk factors for falls in people with OA(LE) found in the literature are mostly the same as the risk factors for people without OA(LE). It is hypothesized that risk factors for falls are exacerbated by OA(LE), such that these individuals are more likely to become dynamically unstable and, once this has occurred, are less able to perform an appropriate compensatory stepping response compared with people without OA(LE). To the extent that this is true, task-specific training targeting the compensatory step, which decreases falls in middle-aged and older women, should be effective for people with OA(LE). The purpose of the present review is to provide the rationale for the above hypothesis. Furthermore, the present authors present evidence that the fall risk of people with OA(LE) could be efficiently and effectively reduced using task-specific training previously shown to reduce falls in middle aged and older women.


Language: en

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