Balance and Falls in Elderly
Balance and Falls in Elderly
Balance and Falls in Elderly
ageing: Balance
and falls in Elderly
PRESENTER: DR. SONAM JAIN (MPT)
DATE: 3 R D APRIL, 2018
Objectives
By the end of this session we will be able to:
Define balance and falls
Know about balance and falls as a complex problem
Know the factors causing a fall
Know about the integrated physiological processes that affect balance
Performing tests to evaluate balance
Balance
Balance is a complex process that
includes reception and integration of
sensory inputs; planning and executing a
movement that requires upright posture.
All activities we perform require us to
react to gravity so that our body adjusts
accordingly to maintain balance.
It is the ability to control the center of
gravity (COG) over the base of support
(BOS).
Balance and falls: a complex problem
According to the U.S. Centers for disease control and prevention, falls lead to
more than 2.8 million injuries that are treated in the emergency department
annually, which include over 800,000 hospitalizations and over 27,000 deaths.
They are also a leading cause of fatal injury and the most common cause of
nonfatal trauma related hospital admissions among the older adults.
Also the World Confederation for Physical Therapy (WCPT) estimates that one
out of three people above 65 years of age will fall each year.
Balance
Depends on 3 systems
1. Sensory system
2. Central nervous system
3. Neuromuscular system
Sensory system
• Somatosensory information, • Visual input provides the CNS with • The vestibular system provides the
gathered from receptors located upright postural control CNS with information about
in joints, muscles, and tendons, information important in angular acceleration of the head
provide the CNS with crucial maintaining the body in a vertical via the semicircular canals and
information regarding body position with the surrounding linear acceleration via the otoliths.
segment position and movement environment. • This information is considered key
in space relative to each other, as sensory data for postural control
well as the amount of force
generated for the movement.
Somatosensory Vestibular
Visual inputs
input inputs
Central processing: CNS
Central processing is an important physiological component of the postural
control system.
The CNS receives sensory inputs, interprets and integrates these inputs, then
coordinates and executes the orders for the neuromuscular system to provide
corrective motor output.
Multiple centers within the CNS are involved in the postural control processes
including the cortex, thalamus, basal ganglia, vestibular nucleus, and
cerebellum.
Postural responses are elicited in both feedback and feed-forward situations.
Neuromuscular system
The neuromuscular system represents the biomechanical
apparatus through which the CNS executes postural actions.
Muscle strength, endurance, latency, torque and power,
flexibility, range of motion (ROM), and postural alignment all
affect the ability of a person to respond to balance
perturbations effectively.
Most of those factors change with advanced age in a way
that decreases the capacity of the older adult to respond
effectively to balance disturbances.
Falls
Falls are a complex problem and over 70% of them occur
due to multiple interacting factors.
An injury from a fall can lead to disability, dependency
and reduced quality of life.
The elderly develops a fear of fall, social withdrawal, and
reduced confidence to perform their activities of daily
living and functional mobility.
This eventually leads to adaptation of an inactive lifestyle
and functional decline.
Factors causing a fall
Falls are associated with a number of risk factors and these falls increase with
the increase in the number of risk factors.
These risk factors can be classified as intrinsic and extrinsic risk factors.
The intrinsic risk factors are those which are related to the individual who
experiences the fall. These intrinsic risk factors can be physiological or
pathological due to normal aging, diseases (chronic and acute) and medication
use etc.
The extrinsic risk factors are the ones related to the environmental features.
These are the ones that surround the individual and include the obstacles,
placement of furniture or assistive devices the individual maybe using and
footwear.
Extrinsic factors
Pharmaceutical
(types of medications , dosage and Environmental
compound medicines may cause
increase in falls) Slippery floor , loose rugs or other
tripping hazards
Hypnotics lack of stair railings , or grab bars
Anxiolytics Unstable or unsuitable furniture
Antidepressants Poor lighting
Sedatives Poor fitting footwear or assistive
Opiods devices
Antihypertensives
Examination and evaluation of balance
and risk of falls
Determining the underlying cause of balance deficits and
related fall risk is a complex undertaking.
Most typically, balance dysfunctions gradually emerge from
the accumulation of multiple impairments and limitations
across many components of postural control, some
associated with normal age-associated changes and others
with acute and chronic health conditions.
History
1. Have you fallen? 2. Can you tell me what happened to 3. Did someone see you fall? If yes,
cause you to fall? did you have a loss of consciousness
• If yes, in the past month how many (LOC)? 4. Did you go to the doctor as a
times have you fallen? • If the person cannot tell you why result of your fall or did you have to
they fell, this clearly deserves more • Often with a hit to the head with go to the emergency room?
• How many times have you fallen in questions and is a “red flag” to an LOC, persons may develop benign
the past 6 months? question them more thoroughly paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV)
Visual Vestibular