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Age-related changes in leg proprioception: implications for postural control

Mélanie Henry, Stéphane Baudry
Key takeaways
  1. 01Leg proprioception is crucial for maintaining balance
  2. 02Aging can alter proprioceptive signals from muscles and joints
  3. 03This may lead to less efficient postural control
  4. 04These changes can impact an older person's functional independence

Age-related decline in leg proprioception can impair balance and postural control, contributing to instability in older adults.

Abstract

In addition to being a prerequisite for many activities of daily living, the ability to maintain steady upright standing is a relevant model to study sensorimotor integrative function. Upright standing requires managing multimodal sensory inputs to produce finely tuned motor output that can be adjusted to accommodate changes in standing conditions and environment. The sensory information used for postural control mainly arises from the vestibular system of the inner ear, vision, and proprioception. Proprioception (sense of body position and movement) encompasses signals from mechanoreceptors (proprioceptors) located in muscles, tendons, and joint capsules. There is general agreement that proprioception signals from leg muscles provide the primary source of information for postural control. This is because of their exquisite sensitivity to detect body sway during unperturbed upright standing that mainly results from variations in leg muscle length induced by rotations around the ankle joint. However, aging is associated with alterations of muscle spindles and their neural pathways, which induce a decrease in the sensitivity, acuity, and integration of the proprioceptive signal. These alterations promote changes in postural control that reduce its efficiency and thereby may have deleterious consequences for the functional independence of an individual. This narrative review provides an overview of how aging alters the proprioceptive signal from the legs and presents compelling evidence that these changes modify the neural control of upright standing.

Cite this study
APA
Mélanie Henry, & Stéphane Baudry (2019). Age-related changes in leg proprioception: implications for postural control. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/age-related-changes-in-leg-proprioception-implications-for-postural-control/
MLA
Mélanie Henry, and Stéphane Baudry. "Age-related changes in leg proprioception: implications for postural control." 2019, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/age-related-changes-in-leg-proprioception-implications-for-postural-control/.
Chicago
Mélanie Henry, Stéphane Baudry. 2019. "Age-related changes in leg proprioception: implications for postural control.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/age-related-changes-in-leg-proprioception-implications-for-postural-control/