Fall-related injuries are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality, particularly in the elderly. We hypothesized that the severity of the impact force on each body part striking the ground in a fall depends several intrinsic factors including available muscle strength, gait speed, fall direction, reaction time, and pre- and post-ground contact body segment movement strategies. Healthy young males learned how to significantly reduce wrist impact by 15% in a sagittally-symmetric forward fall from waist height, and then retained that skill for three months (Chapter 2). Biomechanical computer simulations of those falls (Chapter 3 & 4) showed that a 25% decrease in upper extremity muscle strength required elbow flexion angles of less than 1...
Contains fulltext : 51888.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Falls to the s...
Falls are one of the major leading causes of death for the elderly, and the number of fall-related d...
The epidemic occurrence of falls and fall-related injuries in the elderly is widely recognized, but ...
Fall-related injuries are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality, particularly in the elderly. W...
Fall-related injuries costs the United States more than $50 billion per annum. This thesis addresses...
Approximately 90 % of hip fractures in older adults result from falls, mostly from landing on or nea...
The ability to regain standing balance with a single step after a forward fall was studied with expe...
Purpose: This thesis evaluated the age differences in biomechanics and muscle activity during contro...
An interdisciplinary approach was used to examine how age, biomechanical and psychological factors a...
Introduction: Falling leads all causes of older adult (>60 years) injuries. Most community-dwelling ...
Accidental falls present a large functional and financial burden among people aged 65 years and olde...
Falls cause 83% of traumatic brain injuries (TBI) in older adults aged 65+ (Harvey, 2012). Furthermo...
Hip fracture is rare in young adults, despite evidence that the energy available in a fall is suffic...
Falls cause substantial death and morbidity in the elderly. Fall risk depends on ability to maintai...
Over 90% of hip fractures are due to falls. Yet, only 1-2% of falls result in hip fracture. This sug...
Contains fulltext : 51888.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Falls to the s...
Falls are one of the major leading causes of death for the elderly, and the number of fall-related d...
The epidemic occurrence of falls and fall-related injuries in the elderly is widely recognized, but ...
Fall-related injuries are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality, particularly in the elderly. W...
Fall-related injuries costs the United States more than $50 billion per annum. This thesis addresses...
Approximately 90 % of hip fractures in older adults result from falls, mostly from landing on or nea...
The ability to regain standing balance with a single step after a forward fall was studied with expe...
Purpose: This thesis evaluated the age differences in biomechanics and muscle activity during contro...
An interdisciplinary approach was used to examine how age, biomechanical and psychological factors a...
Introduction: Falling leads all causes of older adult (>60 years) injuries. Most community-dwelling ...
Accidental falls present a large functional and financial burden among people aged 65 years and olde...
Falls cause 83% of traumatic brain injuries (TBI) in older adults aged 65+ (Harvey, 2012). Furthermo...
Hip fracture is rare in young adults, despite evidence that the energy available in a fall is suffic...
Falls cause substantial death and morbidity in the elderly. Fall risk depends on ability to maintai...
Over 90% of hip fractures are due to falls. Yet, only 1-2% of falls result in hip fracture. This sug...
Contains fulltext : 51888.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Falls to the s...
Falls are one of the major leading causes of death for the elderly, and the number of fall-related d...
The epidemic occurrence of falls and fall-related injuries in the elderly is widely recognized, but ...