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Journal Article

Citation

Dixon PC, Schütte KH, Vanwanseele B, Jacobs JV, Dennerlein JT, Schiffman JM. Gait Posture 2018; 61: 257-262.

Affiliation

Liberty Mutual Research Institute for Safety, Hopkinton, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.gaitpost.2018.01.027

PMID

29413794

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Outdoor falls in community-dwelling older adults are often triggered by uneven pedestrian walkways. It remains unclear how older adults adapt to uneven surfaces typically encountered in the outdoor built-environment and whether these adaptations are associated to age-related physiological changes. RESEARCH QUESTION: The aims of this study were to (1) compare gait parameters over uneven and flat brick walkways, (2) evaluate the differences between older and young adults for these two surfaces, and (3) assess if physiological characteristics could predict adaptations in older adults.

METHODS: Balance, strength, reaction-time, full-body marker positions, and acceleration signals from a trunk-mounted inertial measurement unit were collected in seventeen older (71.5 ± 4.2 years) and eighteen young (27.0 ± 4.7 years) healthy adults to compute lower-limb joint kinematics, spatio-temporal parameters, dynamic stability, and accelerometry-derived metrics (symmetry, consistency, and smoothness).

RESULTS: Both groups increased hip flexion at foot-strike, while decreasing ankle dorsiflexion, margin of stability, symmetry, and consistency on the uneven, compared to flat, surface. Older, compared to young, adults showed a larger increase in knee flexion at foot-strike and a larger decrease in smoothness on the uneven surface. Only young adults decreased hip abduction on the uneven surface. Strength, not balance nor reaction-time, was the main predictor of hip abduction in older adults on both surfaces. SIGNIFICANCE: While older adults may be especially vulnerable, uneven surfaces negatively impact gait, irrespective of age, and could represent a risk to all pedestrians.

Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier B.V.


Language: en

Keywords

Aging; Built environment; Falls; Irregular surface; Stability; Trips

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