下肢淋巴水肿会破坏静态和动态平衡

IF 1.4 3区 医学 Q4 ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL
Özlem Karasimav , Pınar Borman , Meltem Dalyan , Elif Yalçin , Zahide Betül Eliuz , İpek Poyraz , Seren Türk
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景由于文献资料稀少,下肢淋巴水肿对患者平衡生活质量的影响尚不明确。本研究旨在确定下肢淋巴水肿患者与健康人的静态和动态平衡对比情况。研究评估了所有参与者在四种情况下(睁眼-稳定-地面、闭眼-稳定-地面、睁眼-不稳定-地面、闭眼-不稳定-地面)的静态平衡稳定性和前后侧摇摆参数以及动态稳定性。与对照组相比,淋巴水肿组的动态稳定性明显降低(P = 0.049)。除睁眼-稳定地面外,淋巴水肿患者在所有条件下的静态平衡参数都受到影响(P = 0.048、P = 0.043、P = 0.017)。动态与静态平衡和侧向摇摆参数与淋巴水肿的持续时间相关(P = 0.046,P = 0.002,P = 0.005)。闭眼-不稳定-地面条件下的前后摇摆与功能状态相关(P = 0.02)。与健康受试者相比,闭眼和地面恶化会导致下肢水肿患者的静态和动态平衡发生显著改变。关于静态和动态平衡失调,我们建议在常规淋巴水肿康复计划中,尤其是在疾病早期,对平衡进行评估并纳入平衡练习。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Lower limb lymphedema disrupts both static and dynamic balance

Background

The impact of lower-limb-lymphedema on quality of life of patients regarding balance is unclear due to the scarcity of literature. The aim of this study was to determine the static and dynamic balance of patients with lower-limb-lymphedema in comparison with healthy subjects.

Methods

This case-control designed study included 30 lymphedema patients and 30 healthy individuals, of whom were 52 female and 8 male with a mean age of 50.63 ± 9.72 years. Static balance stability and anterior-posterior with lateral sway parameters on four conditions (eyes-opened-stable-ground, eyes-closed-stable-ground, eyes-opened-unstable-ground, eyes-closed-unstable-ground) and dynamic stability of all participants were evaluated.

Findings

The demographic variables were similar between the groups. Majority of the patients had lymphedema due to cancer surgery with a stage of 2. Dynamic stability was significantly disrupted in lymphedema group in comparison with controls (P = 0.049). Static balance parameters were impaired on all conditions except the eyes opened-stable ground in lymphedema patients (P = 0.048,P = 0.043,P = 0.017). The dynamic with static balance and lateral sway parameters were correlated with the duration of lymphedema(P = 0.046,P = 0.002,P = 0.005). Anterior-posterior sway on eyes-closed-unstable-ground condition was correlated with functional status (P = 0.02). Static balance on eyes-opened-unstable-ground condition and anterior-posterior sway parameters were correlated with physical activity level (P = 0.015,P = 0.016,P < 0.05).

Interpretation

Closing eyes and the deterioration of ground caused significant alteration of the static and dynamic balance both separately and together in patients with lower-limb-lymphedema compared to healthy subjects. Regarding the static and dynamic imbalance, we suggest the evaluation of balance and inclusion of balance exercises in routine lymphedema rehabilitation program, especially in the early period of disease.

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来源期刊
Clinical Biomechanics
Clinical Biomechanics 医学-工程:生物医学
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
5.60%
发文量
189
审稿时长
12.3 weeks
期刊介绍: Clinical Biomechanics is an international multidisciplinary journal of biomechanics with a focus on medical and clinical applications of new knowledge in the field. The science of biomechanics helps explain the causes of cell, tissue, organ and body system disorders, and supports clinicians in the diagnosis, prognosis and evaluation of treatment methods and technologies. Clinical Biomechanics aims to strengthen the links between laboratory and clinic by publishing cutting-edge biomechanics research which helps to explain the causes of injury and disease, and which provides evidence contributing to improved clinical management. A rigorous peer review system is employed and every attempt is made to process and publish top-quality papers promptly. Clinical Biomechanics explores all facets of body system, organ, tissue and cell biomechanics, with an emphasis on medical and clinical applications of the basic science aspects. The role of basic science is therefore recognized in a medical or clinical context. The readership of the journal closely reflects its multi-disciplinary contents, being a balance of scientists, engineers and clinicians. The contents are in the form of research papers, brief reports, review papers and correspondence, whilst special interest issues and supplements are published from time to time. Disciplines covered include biomechanics and mechanobiology at all scales, bioengineering and use of tissue engineering and biomaterials for clinical applications, biophysics, as well as biomechanical aspects of medical robotics, ergonomics, physical and occupational therapeutics and rehabilitation.
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