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Age and Ageing Advance Access published online on March 9, 2007

Age and Ageing, doi:10.1093/ageing/afm011
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Copyright © The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society.

Article

‘Faster counting while walking’ as a predictor of falls in older adults

Olivier Beauchet1,2,, Véronique Dubost1, Gilles Allali3, Régis Gonthier1, François R. Hermann2 and Reto W. Kressig2,4

1 Department of Geriatrics, Saint-Etienne University Hospitals, Saint-Etienne, France
2 Department of Rehabilitation and Geriatrics, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland
3 Department of Neurology, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland
4 Dpartment of Geriatrics, Basel University Hospitals, Basel, Switzerland

Address correspondence to: O. Beauchet. Tel: ++33 4 77 12 71 96; Fax: ++33 4 77 12 70 49. Email: olivier.beauchet{at}univ-stetienne.fr

Objective: to establish whether changes in a spoken verbal task performance while walking compared with being at rest could predict falls among older adults.

Design: prospective cohort study of 12 months' duration.

Setting: twenty-seven senior housing facilities.

Participants: sample of 187 subjects aged 75–100 (mean age 84.8 ± 5.2). During enrollment, participants were asked to count aloud backward from 50, both at rest and while walking and were divided into two groups according to their counting performance. Information on incident falls during the follow-up year was monthly collected.

Measurements: the number of enumerated figures while sitting on a chair and while walking, and the first fall that occurred during the follow up year.

Results: the number of enumerated figures under dual-task as compared to single task increased among 31.5% of the tested subjects (n = 59) and was associated with lower scores in MMSE (P = 0.034), and higher scores in Geriatric Depression Scale (P = 0.007) and Timed Up & Go (P = 0.005). During the 12 months follow-up, 54 subjects (28.9%) fell. After adjusting for these variables, the increase in counting performance was significantly associated with falls (adjusted OR = 53.3, P < 0.0001). Kaplan–Meier distributions of falls differed significantly between subjects who either increased or decreased their counting performance (P < 0.0001).

Conclusions: faster counting while walking was strongly associated with falls, suggesting that better performance in an additional verbal counting task while walking might represent a new way to predict falls among older adults.

Keywords: dual-task, falls, cognitive performance, older adults

Received 1 September 2006; accepted in revised form 2 February 2007.


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