Thursday, April 16, 2020

Executive function predicts decline in mobility after a fall: The MYHAT study

Your doctor's responsibility is to have protocols that bring back your

5 lost cognitive years from the stroke, because you are going to fall a lot post stroke.  You can't rely on whatever fall prevention strategy your therapist has you doing. You will fall.

Executive function predicts decline in mobility after a fall: The MYHAT study

Experimental GerontologyHughes TF, et al. | April 15, 2020

Via following candidates from the Monongahela Youghiogheny Healthy Aging Team (MYHAT) study annually for up to 9 years for incident falls, researchers ascertained if older adults with better cognitive function were more resilient to mobility decline after a fall. In relation to prefall cognition (executive function, attention, memory, and visuospatial function) among incident fallers (n = 598, mean age 79.1, SD = 7.0), they investigated one-year (mean 1.0 year, SD 0.1) mobility transition pre to postfall using the Timed Up and Go. Results indicated that higher executive function can give resilience to decline in mobility after a fall, particularly among older adults with other risk factors for reduced mobility. For those who were older, sedentary, and had lower BMI, the effect was significantly stronger. Findings suggested an association of higher scores in memory tests, but not in other domains, with less mobility decline among non-fallers.
Read the full article on Experimental Gerontology

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