前庭“噪音”会导致亚临床平衡障碍和跌倒吗?

International journal of physical medicine & rehabilitation Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-10-11
Andrew R Wagner, Ajit Mw Chaudhari, Daniel M Merfeld
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引用次数: 0

摘要

跌倒是老年人意外伤害的主要原因,每年直接导致全世界60多万人死亡。虽然跌倒的问题很复杂,但平衡功能障碍是老年人跌倒发生率增高的主要原因之一。一项针对美国老年人的全国代表性调查显示,不能闭着眼睛站在泡沫垫上,报告“跌倒困难”的几率增加了六倍多。由于“闭眼,泡沫”状态的稳定性依赖于完整的前庭信号,这些数据暗示与年龄相关的前庭功能丧失是导致跌倒的潜在因素,然而,解释与年龄相关的前庭功能丧失与失衡/跌倒之间联系的具体因果机制尚不清楚。在这里,我们回顾了最近的数据,发现前庭感知阈值(前庭感觉噪声的测定)占健康老年人亚临床平衡障碍的近一半,(2)与健康年轻人的姿势摇摆相关。基于健康成人平衡功能障碍和前庭噪音之间的联系,我们假设了以下因果链:(a)前庭反馈中的“噪音”增加——产生前庭反馈的信噪比降低——增加摇摆,(b)过度摇摆导致失衡,(c)失衡导致跌倒。确定与年龄相关的平衡功能障碍的“原因”,将为开发量身定制的干预措施提供信息,以防止不断增长的老年人跌倒和跌倒相关伤害。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Might Vestibular "Noise" Cause Subclinical Balance Impairment and Falls?

Falls are the leading causes of accidental injury in older adults and directly contribute to more than 600,000 deaths each year worldwide. Although the issue of falls is complex, balance dysfunction is one the principal contributors to the heightened incidence of falls in older adults. A nationally representative survey of older adults in the United States showed that an inability to stand on a foam pad with the eyes closed was associated with more than a six-fold increase in the odds of reporting "difficulty with falls." As stability in the "eyes closed, on foam" condition is reliant upon intact vestibular cues, these data implicate age-related vestibular loss as a potential contributor to falls, yet, the specific causal mechanism explaining the link between age-related vestibular loss and imbalance/falls was not known. Here we review recent data showing that, vestibular perceptual thresholds, an assay of vestibular sensory noise, were found to, (1) account for nearly half of subclinical balance impairment in healthy older adults and (2) correlate with postural sway in healthy young adults. Based upon the identified links between balance dysfunction and vestibular noise in healthy adults, we posit the following causal chain: (a) increased "noise" in vestibular feedback - yielding a reduced signal-to-noise ratio in vestibular feedback-increases sway, (b) excessive sway leads to imbalance, and (c) imbalance contributes to falls. Identifying the "cause" of age-related balance dysfunction will inform the development of interventions tailored to prevent falls, and fall-related injuries, in the growing population of older adults.

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