Institution
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Michigan, GG Brown 3208,
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2125, USA.
Title
The effect of age and movement speed on maximum forward reach from an elevated
surface: a study in healthy women.
Source
Clinical Biomechanics. 18(3):190-6, 2003 Mar.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To test the hypotheses (1) that the maximum distance reached by young
or older women when standing on a raised platform is independent of movement
speed, and (2) the maximum forward momentum generated at comfortable and fast
reaching speeds is independent of age. DESIGN: Repeated measures case-control
study in a university laboratory setting.Background. Maximum forward reach distance
is often part of a geriatric mobility assessment. The effect of movement speed,
and hence momentum, on forward reaching behavior is unknown in young or older
subjects, despite the fact that excess momentum might increase the risk of fall-related
injuries, especially from an elevated surface. METHODS: Ten healthy young women
(mean age 23.7 years) and 10 healthy older women (mean age 70.5 years) participated.
Subjects stood on an instrumented force platform and forward reach body segment
kinematics were measured optoelectronically. Whole-body center of reaction and
center of mass trajectories were calculated during six maximum forward reach
trials: three performed "at a comfortable speed", and three performed
"as fast as possible". RESULTS: Subjects reached slightly further
at a comfortable speed than when reaching as fast as possible (P=0.016). Fast
reaches were associated with a 25% increase in momentum (P<0.001; however,
under both speed conditions, older women developed less whole-body momentum
than did young controls (for example, 4.1 vs. 6.1 kgm/s at comfortable speed,
P<0.05). Three young and one older women lost their balance in at least one
trial. CONCLUSIONS: Independent of age, these women reached further when reaching
slowly than when reaching rapidly, and older women restricted peak forward momentum
under both speed conditions when standing on the elevated surface. RELEVANCE:
Interventions designed to reduce falls from raised surfaces might utilize the
insights gained from these women that (1) at any age, one cannot expect to reach
as far when reaching fast as one can when reaching slowly; and (2) comfortable
reaching speed is reduced in older individuals.