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Motor Training for Fall Prevention

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University of Illinois

Status

Completed

Conditions

Fall Prevention

Treatments

Behavioral: Repeated perturbation training
Behavioral: Minimal perturbation training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT01621958
5R01AG029616-03 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
2001-0821

Details and patient eligibility

About

Slip-related falls often cause injury; these often have catastrophic consequences, even among the healthiest older persons. Establishing a retainable preventive training regimen against slip-related falls would, without doubt, have major public health implications. In this study, investigators will demonstrate that older adults can significantly reduce their near-term risk of backward balance loss and falls through motor training with multiple protected slip exposure, and such adaptive improvements from such prophylactic training regimen can be retained over the course of a year.

Full description

Slip-related falls often cause catastrophic injury for both frail and healthy older persons. Investigators have shown that, with motor training by repeated exposure to slips during walking, young adults are able to traverse a potential slipping hazard without losing their balance, regardless of whether a slip actually occurs or not. It is highly unlikely that these effects could be attributed to education or heightened awareness of the slipping threat alone. Furthermore, investigators have demonstrated that these improved motor skills acquired from a single session can be retained 4-6 months or longer upon re-testing, making such intervention highly attractive. Of greater interest, however, is the extent to which older adults can acquire and retain similar protective skills upon such training. This has not been tested to date. Also unknown is how potential confounding factors such as an older adult's functional status might interact with the training. These issues are of importance in that establishing a retainable preventive training regimen against slip-related falls would, without doubt, have major public health implications.

In this study, investigators will demonstrate that older adults can significantly reduce their near-term risk of backward balance loss and falls through motor training by repeated exposure to simulated slips interspersed with no-slip trials. Investigators will verify that awareness or observational learning alone cannot substitute for motor training through an awareness-control group. Investigators will then determine the extent to which adaptive improvements are retained over the course of a year. Finally, investigators will verify that although a single slip exposure may yield some retainable effect, this intensity control group will exhibit significantly less favorable long-term effect on the control of center of mass stability, body weight support, balance loss and fall upon slipping than the motor training group with repeated slips. In addition, investigator expect that the intensity-control group will also have a higher self-reported incidence of falls during the 12-month period than the motor training group with multiple slip exposure.

Enrollment

212 patients

Sex

All

Ages

65+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Subjects with no known history of musculoskeletal, neurological, cardiovascular, or pulmonary impairment that may affect their ability to perform the testing procedures will be included.
  • Subjects in the balance-impaired group will specifically include subjects with unilateral or bilateral vestibular disorders and individuals with balance deterioration due to aging.
  • Subjects in this group must be able ambulate independently for at least 5 meters and score 48/56 on the Berg Balance Scale, and must have no Central Nervous System disorders beyond vestibular disorders and no central/peripheral motor impairments.

Exclusion criteria

The exclusion criteria include the following:

  1. using any sedative of any type,
  2. having known history of osteoporosis,
  3. having any clinically significant functional impairment related to a specific musculoskeletal, neurological, or cardiopulmonary disease,
  4. ultrasound calcaneus bone mineral density T score < -1 (osteoporosis )
  5. Mini-Mental State exam score < 25 (impaired cognition),
  6. timed up-and-go > 13.5 sec (impaired mobility).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

212 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Motor training
Experimental group
Treatment:
Behavioral: Repeated perturbation training
Intensity control
Placebo Comparator group
Treatment:
Behavioral: Minimal perturbation training

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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