Institution
Hope College, Department of Physics and Engineering, Holland, MI 49423, USA.
thelen@hope.edu
Title
Muscle activities used by young and old adults when stepping to regain balance
during a forward fall.
Source
Journal of Electromyography & Kinesiology. 10(2):93-101, 2000 Apr.
Abstract
The current study was undertaken to determine if age-related differences in
muscle activities might relate to older adults being significantly less able
than young adults to recover balance during a forward fall. Fourteen young and
twelve older healthy males were released from forward leans of various magnitudes
and asked to regain standing balance by taking a single forward step. Myoelectric
signals were recorded from 12 lower extremity muscles and processed to compare
the muscle activation patterns of young and older adults. Young adults successfully
recovered from significantly larger leans than older adults using a single step
(32.2 degrees vs. 23.5 degrees ). Muscular latency times, the time between release
and activity onset, ranged from 73 to 114 ms with no significant age-related
differences in the shortest muscular latency times. The overall response muscular
activation patterns were similar for young and older adults. However older adults
were slower to deactivate three stance leg muscles and also demonstrated delays
in activating the step leg hip flexors and knee extensors prior to and during
the swing phase. In the forward fall paradigm studied, age-differences in balance
recovery performance do not seem due to slowness in response onset but may relate
to differences in muscle activation timing during the stepping movement.