Acceptability of Two Perturbation-based Balance Training Paradigms : Perturbation Treadmill vs Dynamic Stability Training in the Presence of Perturbations

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2024
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Hezel, Natalie
Brüll, Leon
Arampatzis, Adamantios
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Gerontology. Karger. 2024, 70(6), S. 661-668. ISSN 0304-324X. eISSN 1423-0003. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.1159/000538105
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Introduction: Perturbation-based balance training is promising for fall prevention in older adults mimicking real-life fall situations at a person’s stability thresholds to improve reactive balance. Hence, it can be associated with anxiety, but knowledge about the acceptability of perturbation-based balance training is scarce.

Method: This is a secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial comparing effects of two different perturbation-based balance training paradigms that aims to evaluate and compare the acceptability of those training paradigms in fall-prone older adults. Participants (74.9±5.7 years) who completed the training (6 weeks, 3x/week) on either a perturbation treadmill (PBTtreadmill: n=22) or unstable surfaces in the presence of perturbations (PBTstability: n=27) were surveyed on the acceptability of perturbation-based balance training using a 21-items questionnaire addressing seven domains (perceived effectiveness, tailoring, demand, safety, burden, devices, affective attitude), based on the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability and context-specific factors. Relative scores (% of absolute maximum) for single items and domains were calculated.

Results: Median domain scores of perceived effectiveness, tailoring, safety, devices, and affective attitude were all ≥70% for both paradigms. The highest scores were obtained for tailoring (both paradigms=100% [interquartile range 80-100%]). Domain scores of demand and burden were in the medium range (40-45%) for both paradigms. No significant differences between paradigms were found for any domain score. Two single items of safety differed significantly, with PBTtreadmill perceived as needing less support (p=.015) and leading less often to balance loss (p=.026) than PBTstability.

Conclusion: Perturbation-based balance training conducted on a perturbation treadmill or on unstable surfaces is well accepted in this fall-prone older sample, even though it is conducted at individual stability thresholds. Tailoring may play a key role in achieving high levels of perceived effectiveness, appropriate levels of demand and burden, and high sense of safety. Perturbation-based balance training delivered on treadmills might be more appropriate for more anxious persons.

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ISO 690HEZEL, Natalie, Leon BRÜLL, Adamantios ARAMPATZIS, Michael SCHWENK, 2024. Acceptability of Two Perturbation-based Balance Training Paradigms : Perturbation Treadmill vs Dynamic Stability Training in the Presence of Perturbations. In: Gerontology. Karger. 2024, 70(6), S. 661-668. ISSN 0304-324X. eISSN 1423-0003. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.1159/000538105
BibTex
@article{Hezel2024Accep-69823,
  year={2024},
  doi={10.1159/000538105},
  title={Acceptability of Two Perturbation-based Balance Training Paradigms : Perturbation Treadmill vs Dynamic Stability Training in the Presence of Perturbations},
  number={6},
  volume={70},
  issn={0304-324X},
  journal={Gerontology},
  pages={661--668},
  author={Hezel, Natalie and Brüll, Leon and Arampatzis, Adamantios and Schwenk, Michael}
}
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Method: This is a secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial comparing effects of two different perturbation-based balance training paradigms that aims to evaluate and compare the acceptability of those training paradigms in fall-prone older adults. Participants (74.9±5.7 years) who completed the training (6 weeks, 3x/week) on either a perturbation treadmill (PBTtreadmill: n=22) or unstable surfaces in the presence of perturbations (PBTstability: n=27) were surveyed on the acceptability of perturbation-based balance training using a 21-items questionnaire addressing seven domains (perceived effectiveness, tailoring, demand, safety, burden, devices, affective attitude), based on the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability and context-specific factors. Relative scores (% of absolute maximum) for single items and domains were calculated.

Results: Median domain scores of perceived effectiveness, tailoring, safety, devices, and affective attitude were all ≥70% for both paradigms. The highest scores were obtained for tailoring (both paradigms=100% [interquartile range 80-100%]). Domain scores of demand and burden were in the medium range (40-45%) for both paradigms. No significant differences between paradigms were found for any domain score. Two single items of safety differed significantly, with PBTtreadmill perceived as needing less support (p=.015) and leading less often to balance loss (p=.026) than PBTstability.

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