是什么导致了平衡维持和恢复方面的年龄和性别差异?

Muscle & nerve. Supplement Pub Date : 1997-01-01
A B Schultz, J A Ashton-Miller, N B Alexander
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引用次数: 0

摘要

与青少年相比,OA患者跌倒和跌倒相关损伤的发生率更高。OF的跌倒率和跌倒相关伤害明显高于OM。健康的OA与YA相比,女性与任何成年年龄的男性相比,都具有较低的优势,并且至少在某些优势方面的发展速度较低。上述避障和平衡恢复研究的结果表明,在时间关键(TC)但不需要高强度(HS)的避障和恢复任务中,OA的风险并不明显高于YA,女性的风险也不明显高于男性。结果表明,对于TC/HS回避和恢复任务,OA比YA和女性比男性更容易受伤。这些年龄和性别差异的来源似乎主要在于肌肉力量和肌肉收缩速度的差异,而不是导致肌肉收缩开始的感觉处理或运动计划背后的神经因素。也许这些发现有助于解释骨性关节炎与骨性关节炎相比,骨性关节炎与骨性关节炎相比,跌倒和跌倒伤害的发生率更高。
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What leads to age and gender differences in balance maintenance and recovery?

OA compared to YA have high rates of falls and fall-related injuries. OF have notably higher rates of falls and fall-related injuries than OM. Healthy OA compared to YA, and females compared to males of any adult age, have lower strengths and have development rates for at least some strengths that are lower. The results of the obstacle avoidance and balance recovery studies described suggest that OA are not notably more at risk than YA, nor are females notably more at risk than males, in avoidance and recovery tasks that are time-critical (TC), but do not have high strength (HS) requirements. The results suggest that for TC/HS avoidance and recovery tasks, OA compared to YA and females compared to males are substantially more at risk for injury. The source of these age and gender differences seems to lie primarily in differences in muscle strengths and speeds of muscle contraction once contraction is initiated, rather than in neural factors underlying the sensory processing or motor planning that leads to the initiation of muscle contraction. Perhaps these findings help to explain the high rates of falls and fall injuries among OA compared to YA, and among OF compared to OM.

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Abstracts of the 50th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Electrodiagnostic Medicine, the 27th International Congress of Clinical Neurophysiology, and the 57th Annual Meeting of the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society. San Francisco, California, USA. September 16-20, 2003. Studies of the human stretch reflex. Human motor units in health and disease. Cortical activation related to arm-movement combinations. Studies of human motor physiology with transcranial magnetic stimulation.
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