Loss of Peripheral Sensory Function Explains Much of the Increase in Postural Sway in Healthy Older Adults

Postural sway increases with age and peripheral sensory disease. Whether, peripheral sensory function is related to postural sway independent of age in healthy adults is unclear. Here, we investigated the relationship between tests of visual function (VISFIELD), vestibular function (CANAL or OTOLITH...

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Published inFrontiers in aging neuroscience Vol. 9; p. 202
Main Authors Anson, Eric, Bigelow, Robin T., Swenor, Bonnielin, Deshpande, Nandini, Studenski, Stephanie, Jeka, John J., Agrawal, Yuri
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Research Foundation 20.06.2017
Frontiers Media S.A
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Summary:Postural sway increases with age and peripheral sensory disease. Whether, peripheral sensory function is related to postural sway independent of age in healthy adults is unclear. Here, we investigated the relationship between tests of visual function (VISFIELD), vestibular function (CANAL or OTOLITH), proprioceptive function (PROP), and age, with center of mass sway area (COM) measured with eyes open then closed on firm and then a foam surface. A cross-sectional sample of 366 community dwelling healthy adults from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging was tested. Multiple linear regressions examined the association between COM and VISFIELD, PROP, CANAL, and OTOLITH separately and in multi-sensory models controlling for age and gender. PROP dominated sensory prediction of sway across most balance conditions (β's = 0.09-0.19, 's < 0.001), except on foam eyes closed where CANAL function loss was the only significant sensory predictor of sway (β = 2.12, < 0.016). Age was not a consistent predictor of sway. This suggests loss of peripheral sensory function explains much of the age-associated increase in sway.
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Reviewed by: Richard Camicioli, University of Alberta, Canada; Cheng-Ya Huang, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Edited by: Aurel Popa-Wagner, University of Rostock, Germany
ISSN:1663-4365
1663-4365
DOI:10.3389/fnagi.2017.00202