Joyce E Ballard, Carol McFarland, Lorraine Silver Wallace, David B Holiday, Glenda Roberson
{"title":"The effect of 15 weeks of exercise on balance, leg strength, and reduction in falls in 40 women aged 65 to 89 years.","authors":"Joyce E Ballard, Carol McFarland, Lorraine Silver Wallace, David B Holiday, Glenda Roberson","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Objective: </strong>Risk of falling increases as people age, and decreased leg strength and poor balance have been implicated as contributors. Our aims were to:1) assess the efficacy of a fall-prevention exercise program on balance and leg strength in women aged 65 to 89 years and 2) conduct a 1-year follow-up to determine the effect of exercise on fall rates.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>Forty women were classified by falling history and fear of falling and assigned to exercise and control groups using stratified randomization. We used the Berg Balance Scale, Get-up and Go, Functional Reach, and Wall-Sit Tests to evaluate changes in balance and leg strength before and after a supervised 15-week exercise program (31-hr sessions/week). We conducted 1-year follow-up telephone interviews and compared the number of falls reported by exercise and control groups.The study used a 2 x 2 (exercise/control by pretest/post-test) factorial design with the testing times being a repeated factor, so we used analysis of variance (ANOVA) to evaluate differences between the 2 groups across testing times. Power analysis computed a priori with STPLAN software (Version 4.2) showed that a sample size of 40 was necessary to determine statistical differences in balance and leg strength.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Exercise subjects showed significant improvement on 5 of 14 items (5.2%, p < or = 05 to 34.4%, p < or = .01) in the Berg Balance Scale and on the total score (6.8%, p < or = .05). Leg strength increased significantly (p < or = .05) on post-test as measured by the Wall-Sit Test. Control subjects reported 6 falls and exercise subjects no falls during the follow-up year, but this difference was not significant using Fischer's exact test (p=.106).</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>The exercise program resulted in increased balance and leg strength, but did not result in a significant difference in falls during the follow-up period. Further research with a larger and possibly older sample is needed to more adequately investigate this question. Health care providers who work with older women should provide exercise programs in which balance and leg strength are emphasized.</p>","PeriodicalId":76028,"journal":{"name":"Journal of the American Medical Women's Association (1972)","volume":"59 4","pages":"255-61"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2004-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of the American Medical Women's Association (1972)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: Risk of falling increases as people age, and decreased leg strength and poor balance have been implicated as contributors. Our aims were to:1) assess the efficacy of a fall-prevention exercise program on balance and leg strength in women aged 65 to 89 years and 2) conduct a 1-year follow-up to determine the effect of exercise on fall rates.
Methods: Forty women were classified by falling history and fear of falling and assigned to exercise and control groups using stratified randomization. We used the Berg Balance Scale, Get-up and Go, Functional Reach, and Wall-Sit Tests to evaluate changes in balance and leg strength before and after a supervised 15-week exercise program (31-hr sessions/week). We conducted 1-year follow-up telephone interviews and compared the number of falls reported by exercise and control groups.The study used a 2 x 2 (exercise/control by pretest/post-test) factorial design with the testing times being a repeated factor, so we used analysis of variance (ANOVA) to evaluate differences between the 2 groups across testing times. Power analysis computed a priori with STPLAN software (Version 4.2) showed that a sample size of 40 was necessary to determine statistical differences in balance and leg strength.
Results: Exercise subjects showed significant improvement on 5 of 14 items (5.2%, p < or = 05 to 34.4%, p < or = .01) in the Berg Balance Scale and on the total score (6.8%, p < or = .05). Leg strength increased significantly (p < or = .05) on post-test as measured by the Wall-Sit Test. Control subjects reported 6 falls and exercise subjects no falls during the follow-up year, but this difference was not significant using Fischer's exact test (p=.106).
Conclusion: The exercise program resulted in increased balance and leg strength, but did not result in a significant difference in falls during the follow-up period. Further research with a larger and possibly older sample is needed to more adequately investigate this question. Health care providers who work with older women should provide exercise programs in which balance and leg strength are emphasized.
目的:随着人们年龄的增长,跌倒的风险增加,腿部力量下降和平衡能力差被认为是原因之一。我们的目的是:1)评估预防跌倒运动项目对65至89岁女性平衡和腿部力量的效果;2)进行为期1年的随访,以确定运动对跌倒率的影响。方法:采用分层随机法将40名女性按跌倒史和对跌倒的恐惧程度进行分类,分为运动组和对照组。我们使用Berg平衡量表,起床和走,功能到达和墙坐测试来评估在监督的15周运动计划(31小时/周)前后平衡和腿部力量的变化。我们进行了为期1年的随访电话访谈,并比较了运动组和对照组报告的跌倒次数。该研究采用2 × 2(运动/控制,前测/后测)因子设计,测试时间为重复因素,因此我们使用方差分析(ANOVA)来评估两组在测试时间上的差异。使用STPLAN软件(Version 4.2)先验计算的功率分析表明,需要40个样本量才能确定平衡和腿部力量的统计差异。结果:运动组在伯格平衡量表14项中的5项(5.2%,p < or = 05 ~ 34.4%, p < or = 0.01)和总分(6.8%,p < or = 0.05)均有显著改善。通过Wall-Sit测试,测试后腿部力量显著增加(p < or = 0.05)。对照组报告了6次跌倒,而运动组在随访期间没有跌倒,但使用Fischer精确检验,这种差异不显著(p=.106)。结论:在随访期间,锻炼计划增加了平衡性和腿部力量,但没有导致跌倒的显著差异。为了更充分地调查这个问题,需要对更大、可能更老的样本进行进一步的研究。与老年妇女一起工作的卫生保健提供者应该提供强调平衡和腿部力量的锻炼计划。