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Clinical Rehabilitation
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Medial–lateral postural stability in communitydwelling women over 40 years of age

J C Nitz

N L Low Choy

R C Isles

Department of Physiotherapy, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

Objective: To document the change in medial–lateral balance in women aged between 40 and 80 years.

Design: A cross-sectional study of six measures of medial–lateral balance was undertaken.

Setting: The Betty Byrne Henderson Centre for Women and Ageing, Royal Women's Hospital, Australia.

Subjects: Five hundred and three community-dwelling women between 40 and 80 years of age were randomly recruited from a large metropolitan region with 366 subjects admitted after applying exclusion criteria.

Measurements: The clinical measurements included the lateral reach and step tests while laboratory measurements were gathered from the Balance Master software programs for unilateral stance and limits of stability.

Results: A significant decline in all measures (p < 0.02) was evident between the forties and sixties age decade cohorts. The clinical step test showed a significant (p < 0.001) decline between the forties and fifties groups. A significant correlation was shown between step test and unilateral stance (p < 0.001) and movement velocity, reaction time and end-point excursion centre of gravity (COG) on the limits of stability test (p < 0.001).

Conclusions: This new evidence demonstrates that there is a significant decline in medial–lateral balance in women that occurs between their forties and sixties. Suggestions for further study were made.

Clinical Rehabilitation, Vol. 17, No. 7, 765-767 (2003)
DOI: 10.1191/0269215503cr675oa


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