Checking your gait from your 20s could tell doctors how likely you are to have a fall later in life

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One of the volunteers walking on the treadmill. Photo Credit: Michael Raitor.
One of the volunteers walking on the treadmill. Photo Credit: Michael Raitor.

International researchers say we can start to examine the way people walk from as early as our twenties to work out the likelihood of us having a fall when we're elderly. To work this out, the scientists fitted ten healthy volunteers between the ages of 24 and 31 with harnesses and filmed them with multiple cameras while they walked on a treadmill. They then got the same participants to walk the treadmill again, but this time with hindrances - ankle braces, eye blocking masks or pneumatic jets - that mimicked the encumberments of walking when we're older. After comparing the former walk to the latter, the team found three measurements  - how different the width of each step was, how different the timing of each step was, and where they placed their feet - to be 86% effective at predicting balance issues.

Media release

From: The Company of Biologists

Brief Summary (≤75 words): Getting old is a fact of life and the changes in the way we walk can lead to nasty falls. Is there a way to predict who is at risk? Researchers in Journal of Experimental Biology show that testing how different the width of each step is, starting in your twenties can give doctors insight into those most at risk of falls in later life, saving billions for healthcare systems and potentially saving lives.

One of the volunteers walking on the treadmill. Photo Credit: Michael Raitor.

Press release: As we get older, our bodies stop performing as they once did. We aren’t as strong as we once were, we don’t see as well as we used to and we start becoming less mobile. These changes inevitably lead to almost a third of people over the age 65 falling each year, resulting in injuries and occasionally death. In the United States alone, it costs the healthcare system billions of dollars annually. However, while aging is a certainty, falling may be preventable. ‘One big challenge is that small balance impairments can go unnoticed until someone actually falls. So, we wanted to ask: Can we detect these impairments before someone gets hurt?’ explains Jiaen Wu of Stanford University, USA. Wu partnered with Michael Raitor, Guan Tan, Kristan Staudenmayer, Scott Delp, Karen Liu and Steven Collins, also of Stanford University, to investigate this question. They publish their discovery in Journal of Experimental Biology that keeping track of the tiny details of the way someone walks throughout their adult life could identify whether they are at risk of taking a life-threatening fall in the future.

To begin to answer this question, the team fitted 10 healthy volunteers between the ages of 24 and 31 with a harness around their waist attached in the front, back and sides to ropes and markers that would allow an array of 11 cameras to track the movement of various body parts as they walked comfortably on a treadmill at 1.25 ms-1. The researchers measured various aspects of the participants’ walking such as how predictable their foot placement was and how far their center of mass moved sideways. Then Wu and colleagues measured the walkers again, but this time they were asked to wear ankle braces, an eye blocking mask or pneumatic jets, all of which encumbered their walking similar to the changes that accompany aging. This time, it became more difficult to predict how wide each step would be – or even when the next step would take place – while the walkers were wearing their impediments suggesting that making their surroundings more difficult to see or making it more difficult to move their limbs properly threw off their balance.

When the scientists compared each person’s measurements from their normal walking to their hampered walking, not all the metrics were good at predicting balance issues. In fact, only three of the

six measurements made before the impairments were any good at foretelling if someone was at risk for a fall: how different the width of each step was, how different the timing of each step was and where they placed their feet. Each of these three measurements were over 86% effective at predicting balance issues. In addition, Wu and colleagues also unexpectedly pulled on the ropes attached to the walker’s harness to see how they recovered from the sudden loss of balance. Surprisingly, adding this small amount recovery information to the information they had already collected for each volunteer didn’t really help predict a fall risk as much as the team expected. ‘We thought that seeing how people recover from a pull would reveal more about their balance ability, but in this study, the normal walking data was just as informative in most cases,’ says Wu.

When the researchers compared each person’s walking to the average of the whole group, they found that the group average was worse at predicting if an individual person would have balance issues than comparing each person to themselves before and after they were impaired. Normally, doctors only test how someone walks when they start having mobility issues. Wu and colleagues suggest that measuring someone’s walking before they attain old age could give clinicians an early warning, hopefully preventing falls before they happen, potentially saving health care systems billions and saving lives as well.

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conference:
Journal of Experimental Biology
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Stanford University, USA
Funder: This work was supported a Stanford Center for Human-centered Artificial Intelligence Grant. J.W. was supported in part by the Swiss National Science Foundation (P500PT_211094). M.R. was supported in part by a US National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship (DGE-1656518). Open Access funding provided by Stanford University. Deposited in PMC for immediate release.
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