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Dawn Irwin MSc DipST

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Exercise & Older People Dawn Irwin MSc DipST Clinical Exercise Specialist Senior Tutor / Assessor Exercise and the Prevention of Falls and Injuries – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dawn Irwin MSc DipST


1
Exercise Older People
Dawn Irwin MSc DipST Clinical Exercise
Specialist Senior Tutor / Assessor Exercise and
the Prevention of Falls and Injuries Advanced
Instructor Training HPC Registered Sports and
Manipulative Physiotherapist
2
We have an ageing population
65 - 74
The number of people aged 65 and over is
projected to increase by 60 per cent by 2031
75 - 84
85
OPCS Audit Commission 1995
3
If Id known I was going to live this long, Id
have taken better care of myself Dubey Blake
4
AGEING AND MUSCLE
  • ? Muscle mass
  • ? Size of Type 2 fast fibres
  • ? Turnover of contractile protein
  • ? Mitochondria
  • ? Proprioception
  • ? Connective tissue and fat
  • ? heat production
  • ? Susceptibility to injury and damage
  • ? Max. heart rate
  • ? Max. stroke volume
  • ? Max. cardiac output
  • ? Aerobic Power
  • ? Systolic B.P.
  • ? Postural Hypotension
  • ? Fatigue
  • ? Breathlessness

5
Functional Ability in older age
EVEN HEALTHY OLDER PEOPLE LOSE...
  • Strength (1 to 2 p.a.)
  • Power (3 to 4 p.a.)
  • Bone density (Women1 to 3, Men0.4 p.a.)
  • Ligament tensile strength (50 by 60)
  • VO2max (1 p.a.)
  • Pacemaker cells (50 by 60)
  • Motor neurones/axons (37 by 60)
  • Maintenance of temperature control

Sedentary behaviour increases the loss of
performance...
6
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7
70 yr old females
active, strength-trained
sedentary
The same difference in muscle size is seen
between a 30 and an 80 yr old
(Adapted from Sipilä Suominen Muscle Nerve
199316294)
8
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9
Young muscle
Old muscle
Angular shape
Crushed and banana-shaped
10
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12
Osteoporosis
13
Young healthy spine
Osteoporotic spine
14
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15
Thresholds for quality of life
16
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17
Exercise and Health
  • Prevention of disease
  • Osteoporosis
  • Impaired glucose tolerance (mature onset
    diabetes)
  • Hypertension
  • Ischaemic heart disease
  • Colon Cancer
  • Stroke
  • Anxiety
  • Depression

Long-term commitment to activity
Effects apparent even when taking up activity at
a later age
18
Exercise and Health
  • Prevention of disability
  • Intermittent claudication
  • Angina pectoris
  • Heart failure
  • Asthma
  • Chronic airflow obstruction
  • Multiple disability

Long-term commitment to activity Effects apparent
even when taking up activity at a later age
19
Exercise and Health
  • Prevention of complications of immobility
  • Faecal impaction
  • Deep vein thrombosis
  • Gravitational oedema
  • Contractures
  • Pressure sores

Effects apparent even when taking up activity at
a later age Movement can be passive and aided
20
Exercise and Health
  • Prevention of isolation
  • Socialisation
  • Touching
  • Prevention of dependence
  • Functional ability
  • Falls
  • Maintenance of Caring Skills
  • Physical performance and mental health

Long-term commitment to activity Effects apparent
even when taking up activity at a later age
21
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22
BENEFITS OF REGULAR EXERCISE
  • IMPROVES OR MAINTAINS
  • Good posture body image
  • Intake of nutrients and immunity to infection
  • Cerebral function, mood, memory
  • Sleep pattern and duration
  • Social contacts

INDEPENDENCE AND QUALITY OF LIFE
  • REDUCES OR PREVENTS
  • Likelihood of falls and fractures
  • Breathlessness, Obesity
  • Constipation, incontinence, urinary urgency
  • Anxiety, Depression, Stress

DEPENDENCE AND ISOLATION
23
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24
THE THREE DIMENSIONS OF HUMAN FRAILTY
TIME
HUMAN FRAILTY (Spirduso, 1995)
DISUSE
DISEASE
25
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26
ACTIVITY AND SURVIVAL
  • Activity gt2000 calories a week (30 lower
    mortality)
  • Hypertensive men who exercised had half the
    mortality rate
  • Smokers who exercised had 30 lower mortality

(Paffenberger et al., 1986) - 16,936 Harvard
Graduates
  • Lowest fitness category at follow-up
  • died 3.5 (men) to 4.5 (women) x rate of fit
    people
  • higher incidence of cancer and Cardiovascular
    disease

(Blair et al., 1989) - 13,344 healthy men and
women
27
MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY
  • 80 of over 80s would rather be dead than suffer
    the loss of independence that moving to a nursing
    home would bring (Salkeld, 2000).
  • 7.5 years of functional disability at the end of
    life (Wilkins Adams, 1983)
  • For 1 hr exercise a week - 10 increase in
    reported health status, 19 decrease in health
    risks (Fries, 1980)
  • Its NEVER TOO LATE (Fiatarone, 1990)

28
Sedentary vs. active lifestyles
  • gt3 hrs per week targeted exercise
  • myocardial infarct - 3 x less likely
  • Osteoporosis - 2 x less likely
  • Fall-related injuries - 2 x less likely
  • Hip fracture - 2 x less likely
  • WHO, 1996 regular physical activity helps to
  • preserve independent living and
  • postpone the age associated declines in balance
    and co-ordination that are major risk factors
    for falls

29
National Service Framework For Older People 2001
- Exercise Evidence
  • Standards
  • 3 Intermediate Care
  • 5 Stroke
  • 6 Falls
  • 7 Mental Health
  • 8 Promotion of Health and active life in old
    age

30
ACTIVITY AND OLDER PEOPLE - SPIRAL OF DECLINE
Elite Older Athlete Physically Active Independent
but Active Physically
Frail Physically Dependent Disabled
Medications Fear of Falling Ageism Disengagement O
wning Up Disability Threshold
31
Routine activity 6 minutes walk or 15 minutes
wait ?
32
HOW MUCH IS ENOUGH?
  • Regular for health - activities are performed
    most days of the week, preferably
    daily
  • (WHO, BHF, Dept. of Health)
  • Adult population - physical activity of a
    moderate intensity for half an hour,
    on at least five days of the week.
  • (Department of Health 1999)
  • Maintenance of Independence - once/twice a week
    minimum targeted exercise
  • (Consensus)

33
WHATS THE DIFFERENCE?
  • Physical Activity
  • any bodily movement produced by skeletal muscles
    that results in energy expenditure.
  • Exercise
  • planned, structured and repetitive bodily
    movement undertaken to improve or maintain one or
    more components of physical fitness.
  • Bouchard 1990

Gardening DIY Housework Bowling
Walking Cycling Exercise class Sports
34
Physical Activity in the UK
  • HEA National Survey of Activity and Health in men
    and women aged 50 (conducted in 1990 and 1991)
  • Questionnaires for 50-69 year olds and for those
    aged 70
  • Allied Dunbar National Fitness Survey (conducted
    in 1990 and 1991)
  • Questionnaires for those aged 50-69 and for those
    aged 70
  • Physical Appraisals for those aged 50-74 and for
    those aged 75

The combined samples give a nationally
representative total of 3078 people over the age
of 50. A physical appraisal was performed in
1318 people.
35
SEDENTARY WAYS
  • 40 of people aged 50 or over in the UK are
    sedentary
  • 60-85 are sedentary in ethnic minority groups
  • Between the ages of 45 and 74 the amount of
    people taking enough activity to benefit health
    declines from 1 in 3 to 1 in 7.

36
Couch potatoes ?
37
Couch potatoes ?
38
SEDENTARY WAYS
  • 1/2 of sedentary gt50s and 2/3 of gt70s
    believe they take part in enough physical
    activity to keep fit.

39
Physical Appraisal - ADNFS
40
Maximal oxygen consumption (VO2 max) in men and
women aged 50-74
Maximal oxygen uptake (ml/kg/min)
VO 2 max to walk comfortably at 3 mph
Age (years)
41
Isometric knee extension strength in men and
women aged 50-74
42
SEDENTARY WAYS
  • Nursing home residents spend 80-90 of their
    time seated or lying down
  • As a result of inactivity, a third of over
    70s cannot walk a quarter of a mile on their own

43
Inactivity as a major risk factor
44
Physical activity and public health the
benefits
  • Coronary Heart Disease 10 billion
    37 attributable to inactivity
  • Diabetes 5.2 billon
    - 56 preventable
  • Obesity 2.5 billion to NHS and economy
  • Falls and fractures among older people 1.7
    billion 46 preventable
  • Mental Health - 32 billion (1996 7)

45
We are all trippers.but when do we become
fallers?
46
Inactivity determined disability ?
47
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48
Reported falling by distance of walking ability

Cambridge City gt75s Cohort, Fleming, 2002,
unpublished
49
Falls a major problem in the UK
  • 11 million people aged gt 65 yrs
  • 28,000 women aged gt 90 yrs
  • Fractures costs 1.7 billion
  • 1 Hip Fracture every 9 mins
  • Cost 12-18K
  • 1 Wrist Fracture every 10 mins
  • Cost 450
  • 500 admitted to Hospital every day
  • 33 never go home

Annual European Home and Leisure Accident
Surveillance Survey (EHLASS) Report UK 2000
50
Fallers
  • 1 in 3 over 65s
  • 1 in 2 over 80s
  • 70-80 of falls go unreported
  • 40 fall at home
  • 5-10 fall on the bus
  • More falls in residential settings than in the
    community

51
Could costs be cut ?
  • Fractures, mostly due to falls in older people,
    cost the NHS 1.7 billion per year.
  • One third of call-outs for London Ambulance
    Service are for people aged 65, nearly 10 are
    fallers
  • 40 of these are not taken into Hospital for
    treatment
  • 40 of nursing home admissions are due to falls
    or balance/mobility problems

52
Inactivity related disease?
  • No standing activity leads to active loss of
    bone and muscle
  • 1 wk bed rest ? strength by 20
  • 1 wk bed rest ? spine BMD by 1

53
Determinants associated with physical activity
  • Ethnicity
  • Gender
  • Educational level
  • Smoking status
  • Overweight
  • Medical condition
  • Perceived lack of ability
  • Motives to improve appearance or fitness
  • Fear of Injury
  • Transportation problems
  • Safety concerns
  • Social Support
  • GP and family advice
  • Myths and mistaken beliefs

54
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55
Strength training in older people - effects on
muscle properties I
56
Strength training in older people - effects on
muscle properties II
57
Effects of strength training on health and
well-being
58

Strength training in frail, institutionalised
older people
59
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60
CHAIR BASED EXERCISE
  • Improvements in wide range of ages /settings
  • Strength and Power (Fiatarone 1990, 1994 Skelton
    1995, 1996)
  • Flexibility and Functional Ability (McMurdo 1993
    Skelton 1995, 1996)
  • Arthritic Pain (Hochberg, 1995) and Postural
    Hypotension (Millar, 1999)
  • Depression (McMurdo, 1993)
  • Rehabilitation following hip fracture (Nicholson,
    1997)
  • ? Risk of future falls (Allen, 1999)

61
Effects of strength training on independence and
functional ability
62
Specificity of training
63
Bone strengthening in gt50s -1 year
(Rutherford et al., 1998)
Post-menopausal women 1 year walking, NO change
spine BMD (Cavanaugh Cann, 1988)
64
Potential Risks in those with low bone density
  • In those who have had spinal fractures
  • Type of Exercise Reoccurrence of
    Fracture
  • Back extension 16
  • Flexion (abd. curls) 89
  • Combined 53
  • No exercise 67

Sinaki Mickelson 1982
65
HRT and Exercise
Notelovitz et al, 1991
66
Effective Home Exercise
  • RCT - gt80 year old women
  • 1 Year duration - Physiotherapist support
  • home-based tailored progressive strength, balance
    and gait training (3x p/w)
  • 20-30 reduction in risk
  • Campbell, BMJ, 1997
  • Then - Physiotherapist led nurse training
  • For over 65s cost effective
  • For over 80s saves money
  • Robertson, BMJ. 2001

67
Group based Exercise
  • Randomised controlled trial
  • Women aged 65 with a history of 3 or more falls
    in previous year
  • Exercise-only intervention 9 months
  • Falls decreased by 60
  • Injurious falls decreased by 75
  • 3 years from baseline
  • 10 in exercise group had died, were in Hospital
    or in a nursing home compared to 33 of those not
    exercising

D.Skelton, O.Rutherford and S.Dinan
68
Training Improvements in Risk Factors STRENGTH
/ POWER / ASYMMETRY
  • Significant isometric and isokinetic improvements
    in the exercise group
  • Ankle plantarflexion 60
  • Ankle dorsiflexion 40
  • Ankle Inversion 25
  • Ankle Eversion 30
  • Hip Flexion 20
  • Lower Limb Power 25
  • Asymmetry reduced 15

69
Training Improvements in Risk Factors
FUNCTIONAL ABILITY BONE
Functional Reach 20 Up and go 20 Floor
rise 50 Balance 60
  • Fun and social activity
  • Confidence in balance
  • Reduced anxiety and fear
  • tripping not falling
  • Playing with grandchildren
  • Caring skills

Fallen Angels Club!
70
SPECIALIST
Dinan Illiffe, 2001
NURSING AND RESIDENTIAL HOMES
HOSPITAL IN-PATIENTS
Unstable Ill
PRIMARY CARE
PUBLIC HEALTH
Stable Ill
Well
COMMUNITY DWELLING
71
Meeting the needs of older people
NVQ3 Cardiac Rehabilitation Postural
Stability Instructors
Physically frail - housebound
NVQ3 Exercise for Special Populations Instructors
1 to 1 or home-based
Independent with human assistance
NVQ2 Exercise for Older People Instructors
Supervised sessions, health care setting
Extend
Independent with assistive aids
Chair-based Exercise, Walking and Games
Leadership Training NVQ2
Supervised sessions, community
Fully independent older people
Peer-mentor Training
Unsupervised, community
Moderate activity, half an hour, 5 x per week
Dinan, 1999
72
Barriers to exercise referral
  • Exercising GPs 3 x more likely to promote
    activity than sedentary GPs
  • Lack of staff time and resources
  • uncertainty about effectiveness
  • patient resistance/reluctance to change
  • insufficient knowledge
  • low priority

73
Do older people take up physical activity?
  • King (1998) reviewed the main RCT trials
  • Attendance averaged 75
  • Half of the interventions used strategies to
    promote participation
  • behavioural strategies
  • telephone assisted
  • range of activities - home, supervised
  • Maintenance better than for younger adults

74
Physical activity and health
  • Dose response curve
  • The lower the baseline level of physical
    activity, the greater the health benefit
    associated with an increase in physical activity
  • (Haskell 1994)

75
The Cost of Exercise
  • Sedentariness appears a far more dangerous
    condition than physical activity in the very old
    American College of Sports Medicine (1998)
  • Physical Activity is now rightly called the best
    buy in public health Yvette Cooper, Minister
    for Public Health (2000)

76
  • Man does not cease to play because he grows old.
    Man grows old because he ceases to play
  • George Bernard Shaw

77
Further Reading
  • Taylor. A. et al (2004) Physical Activity and
    Older Adults a review of health benefits and the
    effectiveness of interventions. J Sports
    Sciences 22 703-725.
  • Finch. H. (1997) Physical Activity at our age
    Qualitative research among older people. Health
    Education Authority, London.
  • MacRae. P. et al. (1996) Physical activity
    levels of ambulatory nursing home residents.
    JAPA 4264-278.
  • Skelton. D. et al. (1999) Physical Activity in
    Later Life Further analysis of the Allied Dunbar
    National Fitness Survey and the Health Education
    Authority Survey of Activity and Health. Health
    Education Authority, London.
  • Exercise in preventing falls and fall related
    injuries in older people A review of RCTs -
    Gardner et al. (2000)

78
Further Reading
  • Spirduso. W. (1995) Physical Activity and
    Aging. Human Kinetics, Champaign, Illinois.
  • King. A. et al. (1998) Physical Activity
    Interventions targeting older adults A critical
    review and recommendations. Am.J. Preventative
    Medicine 15316-333.
  • Skelton. D. et al. (1995) Effects of resistance
    training on strength, power and selected
    functional abilities of women aged 75 and over.
    J.Am.Geriat.Soc. 431081-1087
  • Skelton. D and A. McLaughlin (1996) Training
    functional ability in old age. Physiotherapy.
    82(3) 159-167
  • Young. A and S.M.Dinan (2000) Active in later
    life (Chapter 11). ABC Sports Medicine, 2nd
    Edition, BMJ Publishing Group, London, p51-56.
  • Physical Activity Interventions Targeting Older
    Adults a Critical Review and Recommendations
    King, A. (1999)
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