| Literature DB >> 29667154 |
James Lee1, Graham Webb2, Adam P Shortland2,3, Rebecca Edwards4, Charlotte Wilce4, Gareth D Jones5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Impairments in dynamic balance have a detrimental effect in older adults at risk of falls (OARF). Gait initiation (GI) is a challenging transitional movement. Centre of pressure (COP) excursions using force plates have been used to measure GI performance. The Nintendo Wii Balance Board (WBB) offers an alternative to a standard force plate for the measurement of CoP excursion. AIMS: To determine the reliability of COP excursions using the WBB, and its feasibility within a 4-week strength and balance intervention (SBI) treating OARF.Entities:
Keywords: Balance function; Falls; Gait initiation; Rehabilitation; Reliability; Wii balance board
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29667154 PMCID: PMC6373388 DOI: 10.1007/s40520-018-0945-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging Clin Exp Res ISSN: 1594-0667 Impact factor: 3.636
Fig. 1Feet starting position and walkway set up for GI COP measurement trial. a Subjects wearing non-slip socks adopted quiet standing for at least 10 s with feet orientated on WBB at bi-acromial (shoulder) width, with medial borders in line with direction of walking. b Schematic shows three plywood interconnected sections; the first section accommodating the WBB. On an audible “go” signal, standing subjects walked forward at a self-selected tempo approximately 3 m stopping to pick up an object set in midline on a table. The investigator commenced and ceased 2-dimensional recording of COPnet position at 60 Hz by operating a laptop wirelessly connected to the WBB, yielding COP position data from the beginning of quiet standing to the end of the second toe-off per trial. Dimensions in mm unless otherwise stated (not to scale)
Fig. 2Primary COPnet measures. Schematic plan view of GI showing right foot as swinging limb with approximate COPnet path shown. Three primary measures are outlined
Mean (± SD) max COPnet excursions and COP path time
| Variable | Patient group | Healthy group | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Max ML (COPx) | ||||
| (mm) | 40.62 (± 12.11) | 71.35 (± 17.21) | – | |
| (% stature) | 2.07 (± 1.83) | 4.11 (± 0.98) | *** | |
| Max AP (COPy) | ||||
| (mm) | 23.50 (± 6.92) | 60.16 (± 16.98) | – | |
| (% stature) | 1.49 (± 0.40) | 3.50 (± 0.99) | *** | |
| COPnet path time | ||||
| (s) | 5.45 (± 3.06) | 1.65 (± 0.21) | ** | |
Comparisons between patient and healthy groups are shown with both distance measurement (in mm) and standardised to % stature
COP centre of pressure, M/L mediolateral direction, A/P anteroposterior direction
*Statistically significant at p < 0.05, **p<0.005, ***p < 0.0005
Within-subject reliability results
| Dependent variable | ICC3,1 | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|
| COPx (mm) | 0.895 | (0.676–0.988) |
| COPy (mm) | 0.866 | (0.586–0.984) |
| COPnet path time (s) | 0.517 | (0.490–0.942) |
Fig. 3Mean (± SD) patient group WBB measures. Comparisons between weeks 1 and 4 of the S + B interventions are shown. †Centre of pressure lateral excursion, ‡centre of pressure posterior excursion, §centre of pressure path time, ***statistically significant difference at p < 0.00