Dual tasking and balance in those with central and peripheral vision loss

To investigate the effects of a secondary task on standing balance in patients with glaucoma or AMD compared with age-similar control subjects. Twelve AMD, 12 glaucoma, and 12 control participants underwent posturography under two standing conditions (eyes open on a firm or foam-rubber surface) and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Investigative ophthalmology & visual science 2013-08, Vol.54 (8), p.5408-5415
Hauptverfasser: Kotecha, Aachal, Chopra, Reena, Fahy, Rachel T A, Rubin, Gary S
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container_issue 8
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container_title Investigative ophthalmology & visual science
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creator Kotecha, Aachal
Chopra, Reena
Fahy, Rachel T A
Rubin, Gary S
description To investigate the effects of a secondary task on standing balance in patients with glaucoma or AMD compared with age-similar control subjects. Twelve AMD, 12 glaucoma, and 12 control participants underwent posturography under two standing conditions (eyes open on a firm or foam-rubber surface) and two tasks: quiet standing and undertaking a mental arithmetic task. Center of foot-pressure average displacement (root mean square [RMS]; in millimeters) was calculated. The mean (SD) age of the participants in each group was as follows: controls 66.2 (6.4) years, glaucoma 69.2 (4.3) years, and AMD 72.2 (5.3) years. There were significant differences in RMS between controls and AMD patients when undertaking the mental arithmetic task standing on the firm surface (mean difference [SE]: 2.8 [0.8] mm, P = 0.005). There were significant differences between controls and AMD patients when undertaking the mental arithmetic task on the foam surface, with the difference between controls and glaucoma patients approaching significance (mean difference [SE]: control versus AMD = 3.1 [0.9] mm, P = 0.005; control versus glaucoma = 2.2 [0.9] mm, P = 0.06). Postural instability increases with the addition of a secondary task in older persons, which may put them at greater risk of falls. Patients with central losses exhibit greater instability with the addition of a secondary task, particularly during somatosensory perturbations. The negative effects of secondary tasks on balance control in those with peripheral visual losses become more apparent under somatosensory perturbations.
doi_str_mv 10.1167/iovs.12-12026
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There were significant differences between controls and AMD patients when undertaking the mental arithmetic task on the foam surface, with the difference between controls and glaucoma patients approaching significance (mean difference [SE]: control versus AMD = 3.1 [0.9] mm, P = 0.005; control versus glaucoma = 2.2 [0.9] mm, P = 0.06). Postural instability increases with the addition of a secondary task in older persons, which may put them at greater risk of falls. Patients with central losses exhibit greater instability with the addition of a secondary task, particularly during somatosensory perturbations. 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source MEDLINE; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central
subjects Aged
Aging
Disease Progression
Female
Gait - physiology
Glaucoma - complications
Glaucoma - physiopathology
Humans
Macular Degeneration - complications
Macular Degeneration - physiopathology
Male
Middle Aged
Postural Balance
Posture - physiology
Psychomotor Performance - physiology
Vision, Low - etiology
Vision, Low - physiopathology
Visual Fields
title Dual tasking and balance in those with central and peripheral vision loss
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