Effect of Therapeutic Exercise on Gait Speed in Community-Dwelling Elderly People: A Meta-analysis
Author(s) -
Rosalie B Lopopolo,
Melissa Greco,
Dorianne Sullivan,
Rebecca L. Craik,
Kathleen K Mangione
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
physical therapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1538-6724
pISSN - 0031-9023
DOI - 10.1093/ptj/86.4.520
Subject(s) - gait , medicine , physical medicine and rehabilitation , preferred walking speed , physical therapy , meta analysis , confidence interval
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSEInconsistent research findings make it unclear whether therapeutic exercise improves gait speed in community-dwelling elderly people. Using meta-analytical procedures, we examined the effect of therapeutic exercise on changing gait speed in community-dwelling older adults and the effect of type, intensity, and dose of therapeutic exercise on gait speed.METHODStudies were retrieved using a comprehensive database search. Two independent reviewers determined study eligibility based on inclusion criteria, rated study quality, and extracted information on study methods, design, intervention, and results. Data were combined to obtain an overall effect size, its 95% confidence interval, and a measure of significance. In addition, analyses to characterize the clinical relevance of the findings were performed.RESULTSOne hundred seventeen studies were evaluated, with 24 studies (n=1,302 subjects) meeting the inclusion criteria for habitual gait speed and 18 studies (n=752 subjects) meeting the inclusion criteria for fast gait speed. Therapeutic exercise--or, more specifically, strength training and combination training (aerobic plus other exercise)--had significant effects (r=.145, P=.017; r=.176, P=.002, respectively) on habitual gait speed. High-intensity (effort expended by subjects) exercise and high-dosage (frequency and duration of exercise sessions) intervention also had a significant effect (r=.184, P=.001; r=.190, P=.001, respectively) on gait speed, whereas there was no effect for moderate- and low-intensity exercise or for low-dosage exercise. No exercise intervention affected fast gait speed in this analysis.DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONThe results provide support for the belief that therapeutic exercise can improve gait speed in community-dwelling elderly people and that intensity and dosage are important contributing factors. The relatively weak correlation found between therapeutic exercise and gait speed merits further study.
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