Interactions Between Different Age-Related Factors Affecting Balance Control in Walking

Maintaining balance during walking is a continuous sensorimotor control problem. Throughout the movement, the central nervous system has to collect sensory data about the current state of the body in space, use this information to detect possible threats to balance and adapt the movement pattern to...

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Published inFrontiers in sports and active living Vol. 2; p. 94
Main Authors Reimann, Hendrik, Ramadan, Rachid, Fettrow, Tyler, Hafer, Jocelyn F., Geyer, Hartmut, Jeka, John J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 31.07.2020
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Summary:Maintaining balance during walking is a continuous sensorimotor control problem. Throughout the movement, the central nervous system has to collect sensory data about the current state of the body in space, use this information to detect possible threats to balance and adapt the movement pattern to ensure stability. Failure of this sensorimotor loop can lead to dire consequences in the form of falls, injury and death. Such failures tend to become more prevalent as people get older. While research has established a number of factors associated with higher risk of falls, we know relatively little about age-related changes of the underlying sensorimotor control loop and how such changes are related to empirically established risk factors. This paper approaches the problem of age-related fall risk from a neural control perspective. We begin by summarizing recent empirical findings about the neural control laws mapping sensory input to motor output for balance control during walking. These findings were established in young, neurotypical study populations and establish a baseline of sensorimotor control of balance. We then review correlates for deteriorating balance control in older adults, of muscle weakness, slow walking, cognitive decline, and increased visual dependency. While empirical associations between these factors and fall risk have been established reasonably well, we know relatively little about the underlying causal relationships. Establishing such causal relationships is hard, because the different factors all co-vary with age and are difficult to isolate empirically. One option to analyze the role of an individual factor for balance control is to use computational models of walking comprising all levels of the sensorimotor control loop. We introduce one such model that generates walking movement patterns from a short list of spinal reflex modules with limited supraspinal modulation for balance. We show how this model can be used to simulate empirical studies, and how comparison between the model and empirical results can indicate gaps in our current understanding of balance control. We also show how different aspects of aging can be added to this model to study their effect on balance control in isolation.
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This article was submitted to Biomechanics and Control of Human Movement, a section of the journal Frontiers in Sports and Active Living
Reviewed by: Jesse Craig Dean, Medical University of South Carolina, United States; Jacques Duysens, KU-Leuven, Belgium
Edited by: Sjoerd M. Bruijn, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands
ISSN:2624-9367
2624-9367
DOI:10.3389/fspor.2020.00094