Papers

Basic information

Name FUJIKAWA Takamitsu

Title

Relationship between respiratory muscle strength and dynamic balance in older persons requiring care or support: Focusing on the maximal single step length test and maximal double step length test as dynamic balance indices.

Author

Takumi Jiroumaru, Yutaro Hyodo, Kenji Mori, Tomoka Hattori, Michio Wachi, Nobuko Shichiri, Takamitsu Fujikawa

Sole or Joint Author

Joint Author

Journal

Gait & posture

Publisher

 

All Volumes

 

All Pages

 

Volume

109

Number

 

Starting Page

64

Ending Page

69

Publication Date

2024-01

Referee Paper

Refereed

Invited Paper

 

Language

 

MISC Class

Foreign

Publishing Type

Research paper (scientific journal)

ISSN

 

ID:DOI

10.1016/j.gaitpost.2023.12.021

ID:NAID

 

ID:PMID

 

URL

Description

Background
Falls are a major health problem. The relationship between dynamic balance related to falls and respiratory muscle strength related to sarcopenia and frailty is poorly understood.
Research question
How do dynamic balance measures, such as maximal single step length test (MSL) and maximal double step length test (MDST), and respiratory muscle strength measures, such as maximal inspiratory (PImax) and maximal expiratory (PEmax), related to the requirement for long-term care or support in older people who live in the community?
Methods
This was a cross-sectional study of 39 older people (17 men, 22 women) aged ≥ 65 years community-dwelling who were certified as requiring long-term care or support under the Japanese system. The participants’ PImax, PEmax, MSL, and MDST results were recorded. The measurement data were evaluated using Pearson’s correlation coefficients and multiple regression analysis.
Results
MDST showed a positive correlation with PImax (r = 0.430, p = 0.006) but no correlation with PEmax. MSL showed no correlation with PImax or PEmax. A positive correlation was found between MDST and MSL (r = 0.851, p < 0.001), and multiple regression analysis with MDST as the dependent variable and PImax and MST as independent variables showed significant differences for MSL (p < 0.001) and PImax (p = 0.027).
Significance
In older people requiring long-term care or support, MDST had a greater association with inspiratory muscle strength compared with MSL. These results suggest the importance of inspiratory muscle strength training and MDST assessment in the prevention of falls in older people requiring long-term care or support.

ID:JGlobalID

 

arXiv ID

 

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DBLP ID

 

WekoID of OpenDepo