Lower-limb muscle strength, static and dynamic postural stabilities, risk of falling and fear of falling in polio survivors and healthy subjects.

Thaiana Santos Galvão, Egídio Sabino Magalhães Júnior, Marco Antonio Orsini Neves, Arthur de Sá Ferreira
Author Information
  1. Thaiana Santos Galvão: Postgraduate Program in Rehabilitation Sciences, Centro Universitário Augusto Motta/UNISUAM , Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
  2. Egídio Sabino Magalhães Júnior: Postgraduate Program in Rehabilitation Sciences, Centro Universitário Augusto Motta/UNISUAM , Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
  3. Marco Antonio Orsini Neves: Postgraduate Program in Rehabilitation Sciences, Centro Universitário Augusto Motta/UNISUAM , Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
  4. Arthur de Sá Ferreira: Postgraduate Program in Rehabilitation Sciences, Centro Universitário Augusto Motta/UNISUAM , Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil. ORCID

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: This study investigated the association between preserved lower-limb muscle strength, dynamic and static postural stability, risk of falling, and fear of falling in Polio survivors. We also investigated whether these clinical features differ between Polio survivors and healthy controls. This quasi-experimental study enrolled 16 Polio survivors (13 underwent a complete-case analysis) and 12 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. Participants were assessed by the manual muscle test, Berg Balance Scale, force platform posturography, and Falls Efficacy Scale. Between-group mean differences with confidence intervals (MD, CI 95%) and Spearman's are reported. Compared to healthy controls, Polio survivors presented reduced muscle strength (MD = -13, CI 95% -16 to -9 points), lower dynamic postural stability (MD = -14, CI 95% -19 to -8 points), and increased fear of falling (MD = 14, CI 95% 10-18 points) (all  < 0.001). In Polio survivors, lower-limb muscle strength was correlated with dynamic ( = 0.760) and static postural stability ( = 0.738-0.351), risk of falling ( = -0.746), and fear of falling ( = -0.432). Dynamic postural stability was correlated with risk of falling ( = -0.841), fear of falling ( = -0.277), and static postural stability ( = -0.869 to -0.435;  = -0.361 to -0.200, respectively). Risk and fear of falling were also correlated ( = 0.464). Polio survivors exhibited impaired dynamic postural stability but preserved static stability and increased risk of falling and fear of falling. Preserved lower-limb muscle strength, postural stability, fear of falling, and risk of falling are associated clinical features in this population.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Accidental Falls
Adult
Aged
Fear
Female
Healthy Volunteers
Humans
Lower Extremity
Male
Middle Aged
Muscle Strength
Poliomyelitis
Postural Balance
Surveys and Questionnaires
Survivors

Word Cloud

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