Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Volume 90, Issue 3 , Pages 470-474, March 2009

Validity of a Functional Dynamic Walking Test for the Elderly

Presented to the 12th Annual Congress of European College Sport Science, July 11–14, 2007, Jyvaskyla, Finland.

  • Sally D. Lark, PhD

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorrespondence to Sally D. Lark, PhD, Institute of Food, Nutrition, and Human Health, Massey University, Private Bag 756, Wellington 6140, New Zealand
  • ,
  • Sowjanya Pasupuleti, MSc

University of Glamorgan, Faculty of Health, Sport, and Science, Pontypridd, Wales, UK

Abstract 

Lark SD, Pasupuleti S. Validity of a functional dynamic walking test for the elderly.

Objective

To determine the validity of a safe, quick, and simple method of measuring dynamic balance in the elderly during gait called the parallel walk test.

Design

Control study.

Setting

Outpatient clinic, community.

Participants

Twenty-seven elderly fallers (age 82±6y) registered at a falls clinic and 34 elderly nonfallers (age 76±7y) were recruited to this study based on Mini Mental State Examination and Barthel Index scores.

Interventions

Subjects were timed as they walked 6m between 2 parallel lines on the floor at 3 different widths (20, 30.5, 38cm) in their own footwear. They were scored for foot placement on the line (1 point) or outside the lines (2 points). Participants also performed a timed 6-m tandem walk test, a 30-second tandem stance, and a 30-second parallel stance.

Main Outcome Measures

Scores and time to complete the parallel walk test and tandem walk test along with the time of standing for tandem and parallel stance. Validity coefficients were calculated for the sensitivity and specificity of the parallel walk test.

Results

All subjects completed the parallel walk test, but few attempted and completed the tandem walk test. The fallers had significantly greater scores at 20 and 30.5cm and took significantly longer to complete the 6m at all widths. The 20-cm width was most discriminatory. The parallel walk test showed a significant correlation with the tandem stance.

Conclusions

All subjects attempted and completed the parallel walk test but not the tandem walk test. The time to completion and scoring accurately measures dynamic balance during gait in elderly fallers. The parallel walk test could be a useful tool in the clinical setting for assessing balance in gait pre- and postintervention.

Key Words: Balance, Elderly, Gait, Rehabilitation, Validity

List of Abbreviations: SEM, standard error of the mean, TUG, Timed Up & Go

 

 Supported by the School of Applied Sciences, University of Glamorgan, Wales, UK.

 No commercial party having a direct financial interest in the results of the research supporting this article has or will confer a benefit on the authors or on any organization with which the authors are associated.

 Reprints are not available from the author.

PII: S0003-9993(08)01699-7

doi:10.1016/j.apmr.2008.08.221

Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Volume 90, Issue 3 , Pages 470-474, March 2009