4.2 Article

Effects of age and surface instability on the control of the center of mass

期刊

HUMAN MOVEMENT SCIENCE
卷 82, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.humov.2022.102930

关键词

Postural control; Ageing; CoP mechanism; Counter-rotation mechanism; Balance board; Center of mass acceleration

资金

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) [451-12-041, 016. Vidi.178.014]
  2. [NWO 451-12-041]

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This study aimed to assess mediolateral balance performance and the related use of postural control mechanisms in different age groups when standing on different surfaces. The findings showed that balance loss was more likely to occur on unstable surfaces and that younger and older individuals had poorer balance performance. The contribution of the Center of Pressure (CoP) mechanism was found to be larger than the counter-rotation mechanism, and deviations in head orientation were smaller compared to balance board orientation.
During standing, posture can be controlled by accelerating the Center of Mass (CoM) through shifting the center of pressure (CoP) within the base of support by applying ankle moments (CoP mechanism), or through the counter-rotation mechanism, i.e., changing the angular momentum of segments around the CoM to change the direction of the ground reaction force. Postural control develops over the lifespan; at both the beginning and the end of the lifespan adequate postural control appears more challenging. In this study, we aimed to assess mediolateral balance performance and the related use of the postural control mechanisms in children, older adults and younger adults when standing on different (unstable) surfaces. Sixteen pre-pubertal children (6-9y), 17 younger adults (18-24y) and eight older adults (65-80y) performed bipedal upright standing trials of 16 s on a rigid surface and on three balance boards that could freely move in the frontal plane, varying in height (15-19 cm) of the surface of the board above the point of contact with the floor. Full body kinematics (16 segments, 48 markers, using SIMI 3D-motion analysis system (GmbH) and DeepLabCut and Anipose) were retrieved. Performance related outcome measures, i.e., the number of trials with balance loss and the Root Mean Square (RMS) of the time series of the CoM acceleration, the contributions of the CoP mechanism and the counter-rotation mechanism to the CoM acceleration in the frontal plane and selected kinematic measures, i.e. the orientation of the board and the head and the Mean Power Frequency (MPF) of the balance board orientation and the CoM acceleration were determined. Balance loss only occurred when standing on the highest balance board, twice in one older adult once in one younger adult. In children and older adults, the RMS of the CoM accelerations were larger, corresponding to poorer balance performance. Across age groups and conditions, the contribution of the CoP mechanism to the total CoM acceleration was much larger than that of the counter-rotation mechanisms, ranging from 94% to 113% vs 23% to 38% (with totals higher than 100% indicating opposite effects of both mechanisms). Deviations in head orientation were small compared to deviations in balance board orientation. We suggest that the CoP mechanism is dominant, since the counter-rotation mechanism would conflict with stabilizing the orientation of the head in space.

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