Department of Sport, Health and Exercise Science, University of Hull, Hull, HU6 7RX, United Kingdom.
Department of Sport, Health and Exercise Science, University of Hull, Hull, HU6 7RX, United Kingdom.
Gait Posture. 2021 Feb;84:198-204. doi: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2020.12.001. Epub 2020 Dec 9.
Individuals with a lower limb amputation (LLA) have an increased risk of falls and often report lower balance confidence. They must compensate for altered mechanics and prosthetic limitations in order to execute appropriate motor responses to postural perturbations. Personalised exercise could be an effective strategy to enhance balance and reduce falls.
In this study, we investigated whether a personalised exercise programme could improve postural control and self-reported balance confidence in individuals with an LLA.
Participants were block randomised into two groups (exercise, n = 7; control, n = 7) based on age and level of amputation. The exercise group completed a 12-week personalised exercise programme, including home-based exercise sessions, consisting of balance, endurance, strength, and flexibility training. The control group continued with their normal daily activities. All participants performed the Sensory Organization Test (SOT) and Motor Control Test (MCT) on the NeuroCom SMART Equitest, and completed the Activities-specific Balance Confidence-UK (ABC) self-report questionnaire, at baseline and post-intervention.
Exercise group equilibrium scores improved significantly when standing on an unstable support surface with no visual input and inaccurate somatosensory feedback (SOT condition 5, P < 0.012, d = 1.45). There were significant group*time interactions for medium (P = 0.029) and large (P = 0.048) support surface forward translations, which were associated with a trend towards increased weight-bearing on the intact limb in the control group (medium: P = 0.055; large: P = 0.087). No significant changes in ABC score were observed. These results indicate reduced reliance on visual input, and/or enhanced interpretation of somatosensory input, following an exercise programme. However, objective improvements in aspects of postural control were not associated with subjective improvements in self-reported balance confidence. More weight-bearing asymmetry in the control group suggests that a lack of targeted exercise training may have detrimental effects, with potential adverse long-term musculoskeletal consequences, that were quantifiable within a short timeframe.
下肢截肢(LLA)患者跌倒风险增加,且常报告平衡信心较低。为了对姿势扰动做出适当的运动反应,他们必须补偿改变的力学和假肢限制。个性化运动可能是增强平衡和减少跌倒的有效策略。
本研究旨在探讨个性化运动方案是否可以改善 LLA 患者的姿势控制和自我报告的平衡信心。
参与者根据年龄和截肢水平分为两组(运动组,n=7;对照组,n=7)。运动组完成了 12 周的个性化运动方案,包括家庭运动课程,包括平衡、耐力、力量和灵活性训练。对照组继续进行正常的日常活动。所有参与者在基线和干预后均在 NeuroCom SMART Equitest 上进行感觉组织测试(SOT)和运动控制测试(MCT),并完成活动特异性平衡信心-UK(ABC)自我报告问卷。
当站立在不稳定的支撑表面上,没有视觉输入和不准确的本体感觉反馈(SOT 条件 5)时,运动组的平衡评分显著提高(P<0.012,d=1.45)。中等(P=0.029)和大(P=0.048)支撑面向前平移的组*时间交互作用有显著差异,这与对照组在完整肢体上的承重增加趋势相关(中等:P=0.055;大:P=0.087)。ABC 评分无显著变化。这些结果表明,运动方案后对视觉输入的依赖减少,和/或对本体感觉输入的解释增强。然而,姿势控制各方面的客观改善与自我报告平衡信心的主观改善无关。对照组的承重不对称性增加表明缺乏有针对性的运动训练可能产生不利影响,可能对长期的肌肉骨骼产生潜在的不利影响,这些影响在短时间内可以量化。