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Independent influence of gait speed and step length on stability and fall risk

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journal contribution
posted on 2011-05-25, 00:00 authored by D. D. Espy, F. Yang, T. Bhatt, Y.-C. Pai
With aging, individuals’ gaits become slower and their steps shorter; both are thought to improve stability against balance threats. Recent studies have shown that shorter step lengths, which bring the center of mass (COM) closer to the leading foot, improve stability against slip-related falls. However, a slower gait, hence lower COM velocity, does the opposite. Due to the inherent coupling of step length and speed in spontaneous gait, the extent to which the benefit of shorter steps can offset the slower speed is unknown. The purpose of this study was to investigate, through decoupling, the independent effects of gait speed and step length on gait stability and the likelihood of slip-induced falls. Fifty-seven young adults walked at one of three target gait patterns, two of equal speed and two of equal step length; at a later trial, they encountered an unannounced slip. The results supported our hypotheses that faster gait as well as shorter steps each ameliorates fall risk when a slip is encountered. This appeared to be attributable to the maintenance of stability from slip initiation to liftoff of the recovery foot during the slip. Successful decoupling of gait speed from step length reveals for the first time that, although slow gait in itself leads to instability and falls (a one-standard-deviation decrease in gait speed increases the odds of fall by 4 fold), this effect is offset by the related decrease in step length (the same one-standard-deviation decrease in step length lowers fall risk by 6 times).

Funding

This work was funded by NIH 2R01-AG16727 (YCP).

History

Publisher Statement

Post print version of article may differ from published version. The definitive version is available through Elsevier at DOI: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2010.06.013

Publisher

Elsevier

Language

  • en_US

issn

0966-6362

Issue date

2010-07-01

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