Abstract

Posturography is utilized to assess the influence of aging on postural control. Although this measurement is advantageous for finding group-level differences between the young and the elderly, it is unclear whether it has the potential to differentiate elderly individuals who are affected by various impacts of aging. The purpose of this study was to determine the utility of posturography to discriminate elderly individuals from young adults. We investigated the performances of the random forest classifiers constructed from center of pressure (COP) indices for discriminating standing postures between healthy elderly and young people. Postural sways in 19 young and 31 community-dwelling elderly participants were measured using force plates in 4 standing conditions: bipedal standing, standing on a narrow base, standing on foam rubber, and standing with eyes closed. We further verified the informative predictors that contributed to the prediction model. As the results, the classifier based on the COP indices for standing on foam rubber showed the best performance (accuracy: 93.4%, sensitivity: 94.4%, specificity: 93.6%, area under the curve of receiving operator characteristics: 0.95), followed by the classifier for standing with eyes closed. The informative predictors varied depending on the postural conditions. Our findings demonstrated the potential of posturography for identifying elderly postures. The evaluation of sensory re-weighting using the appropriate COP indices would be a useful clinical tool for detecting the progress of aging on postural control.

Highlights

  • Posturography is utilized to assess the influence of aging on postural control

  • The present study demonstrated that the standing posture of elderly individuals could be discriminated by the center of pressure (COP) indices, especially when they were measured using foam rubber, from the standing posture of young people with high accuracy

  • Our study demonstrated the utility of posturography for identifying the COPs of the healthy elderly

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Summary

Introduction

Posturography is utilized to assess the influence of aging on postural control This measurement is advantageous for finding group-level differences between the young and the elderly, it is unclear whether it has the potential to differentiate elderly individuals who are affected by various impacts of aging. It has been demonstrated that the influence of aging on standing posture is characterized by increased co-contraction in the lower-limb ­muscles[1], greater stiffness of the ankle ­joint[2], greater physiological tremor leading to force ­fluctuations[3], less flexible coordination of joint ­movement[4], and changes of sensory ­preference[5]. The purpose of this study was to clarify whether COP could be used to discriminate elderly postures from young postures regardless of the extent of aging, and, if the COP can do so, we attempted to identify which indices are the most informative. The utility of COP as an indicator of the progress of aging on postural control would be supported

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