J Korean Neurol Assoc.  2004 Oct;22(5):485-491.

Change of the Balance Function with Aging: Computerized Dynamic Posturography Study

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Neurology, Dankook University College of Medicine, Cheonan, Korea. taejung@dku.edu

Abstract

BACKGROUND
The purpose of this study is to evaluate balance functions as one ages using the values of the sensory organization test (SOT) and the motor control test (MCT) of computerized dynamic posturography (CDP) in healthy Korean adults. METHODS: We studied the equilibrium scores of the SOT and weight symmetries, latencies, and adaptation scores of the MCT in 72 healthy Korean adults. Subjects were divided into three age groups, the 30's (young group), 50's (middle-aged group), and 70's (elderly group). RESULTS: In the SOT, the range of mean equilibrium scores was from 69.8 to 94.2 in the 3rd decade group, 62.6 to 93.8 in the 5th decade group, 59.2 to 91.2 in the 7th decade group. In the MCT, during sudden anterior and posterior perturbations, the weight symmetries were 101.1 +/- 7.5 in the 3rd decade group, 103.6 +/- 6.9 in the 5th decade group, and 106.4 +/- 9.4 in the 7th decade group. The mean latencies were 123.6-132.8 msec in the 3rd decade group, 130.5-138.5 msec in the 5th decade group, 132.7-141.8 msec in the 7th decade group. CONCLUSIONS: Almost all measures of balance were significantly worse in the elderly group compared with the young group and some changes of balance were observed in the middle-aged group as well. These significant age-associated declines of balance function suggested the decreased capacity to process sensory inputs in aged persons. This occurs most likely as a result of biomechanical or central processing changes.

Keyword

Aging; Balance; Computerized dynamic posturography; Sensory organization test; Motor control test

MeSH Terms

Adult
Aged
Aging*
Humans
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