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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Combined resistance and balance-jumping exercise reduces older women's injurious falls and fractures: 5-year follow-up study
Harri SievänenAri HeinonenKirsti Uusi-rasiPekka KannusSaija Karinkantasubject
Agingmedicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsPoison controlKaplan-Meier Estimatelaw.inventionFractures Bonesymbols.namesakeRandomized controlled trialRisk FactorslawOdds RatiomedicineHumansMuscle StrengthProspective StudiesRegistriesPoisson regressionProspective cohort studyGeriatric AssessmentPostural BalanceExerciseFinlandAgedProportional Hazards ModelsProportional hazards modelbusiness.industryIncidenceHazard ratioAge FactorsResistance Trainingta3141General MedicineOdds ratioInjurious fallsTreatment OutcomeOlder adultsRelative risksymbolsPhysical therapyWomen's HealthAccidental FallsFemaleIndependent LivingGeriatrics and GerontologybusinessFracturesFollow-Up Studiesdescription
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: previously, a randomised controlled exercise intervention study (RCT) showed that combined resistance and balance-jumping training (COMB) improved physical functioning and bone strength. The purpose of this follow-up study was to assess whether this exercise intervention had long-lasting effects in reducing injurious falls and fractures. DESIGN: five-year health-care register-based follow-up study after a 1-year, four-arm RCT. SETTING: community-dwelling older women in Finland. SUBJECTS: one hundred and forty-five of the original 149 RCT participants; women aged 70-78 years at the beginning. METHODS: participants' health-care visits were collected from computerised patient register. An injurious fall was defined as an event in which the subject contacted the health-care professionals or was taken to a hospital, due to a fall. The rate of injured fallers was assessed by Cox proportional hazards model (hazard ratio, HR), and the rate of injurious falls and fractures by Poisson regression (risk ratio, RR). RESULTS: eighty-one injurious falls including 26 fractures occurred during the follow-up. The rate of injured fallers was 62% lower in COMB group compared with the controls (HR 0.38, 95% CI 0.17 to 0.85). In addition, COMB group had 51% less injurious falls (RR 0.49, 95% CI 0.25 to 0.98) and 74% less fractures (RR 0.26, 95% CI 0.07 to 0.97). CONCLUSIONS: home-dwelling older women who participated in a 12-month intensive multi-component exercise training showed a reduced incidence for injurious falls during 5-year post-intervention period. Reduction in fractures was also evident. These long-term effects need to be confirmed in future studies. Language: en
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014-10-24 | Age and Ageing |