The Effect of Yoga on Decreasing Risk of Fall-Related Injury in Peri and Post-Menopausal
NCT ID: NCT05106010
Last Updated: 2021-11-03
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
36 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2018-11-01
2020-02-15
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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The risk of injury from falls depends on both the severity of impact and neuromuscular capacity such as bone and muscle strength of the affected body part. Most falls in community-dwelling older women occur in a forward direction. Forward falls are typically combined with hand contact as a protective response to prevent head, hip or torso injury. Evidence from the investigators' research team suggests that women in their 60s and 70s years do not have the same capacity to control a safe landing and decrease force impact compared to women in their 20s or 30s.Older women also demonstrate diminished activation of the abdominal core muscles prior to an unexpected simulated fall. The impact of diminished pelvic floor muscle control could also be a contributing factor to fall and injury risk in peri- and post-menopausal women as it has been associated with decreased balance, urinary incontinence and fall risk.
Yoga is a common recreational choice for peri- and post-menopausal women. Reasons could include a range of health improvements such as easing menopausal symptoms, improving pelvic floor dysfunctions such as incontinence or pelvic pain, enhancing bone loading to combat early osteoporosis, and improving overall quality of life. Yoga has also been associated with benefits to decrease fall risk; however, there is no substantive evidence that these outcomes result in a decrease in fall rates or a reduction in the injuries associated with falling.
Yoga, a system of health that promotes physical, mental, emotional, social and spiritual well-being, may offer unique benefits to decrease both fall risk and injury risk in the event a fall is unavoidable. Hatha yoga includes physical poses, mindful movement, breath awareness and regulation practices that can address balance, flexibility, and promote upper body loading and whole body strength training. The additional focus on abdominal and pelvic floor core control and breath techniques during functional movement may also promote motor control important in the maintenance of balance and enhance protective responses and landing strategies. The positive mental health focus and meditative component of linking physical postures and movement to breath could also help to improve balance confidence and decrease fear of falls. Yoga has multiple promising benefits to decrease the risk of fall-related injury in older women but there remains gaps in the literature to substantiate these claims.
The primary research questions are:
1. What is the effect of 12 weeks of hatha yoga on fall risk factors in peri- and post-menopausal women? (balance, balance confidence, functional mobility, muscle strength, incontinence leakage, symptoms and bother) and
2. Does 12 weeks of hatha yoga improve capacity to land and control the descent of a forward fall in peri- and post-menopausal women? (muscle activation, range of motion, reaction time, and energy absorption).
Secondary research questions will explore:
3. What are the perceived changes in general health, fall risk, menopausal symptoms and incontinence for women who participate in yoga? What are the motivators, facilitators and barriers for participation in a regular yoga practice?
Conditions
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Study Design
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CASE_CONTROL
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Usual Activity
Participants continued with usual activity, not participating in any yoga intervention for 12 weeks
No interventions assigned to this group
Balance Flow Yoga
Community hatha yoga flow class, 75 minutes duration, twice per week for 12 weeks
Balance Flow Yoga
The yoga class is based on hatha yoga which includes physical poses and mindful movement integrated with breath. Conducted in a local yoga studio for 75 minutes duration, twice per week and also open to the public. The specific yoga techniques reflect the objectives of our study and focus on addressing some of the physical, mental and emotional factors that potentially contribute to falls such as balance, balance confidence, strength, coordination, proprioception, core training strategies, and breathing techniques integrated with mindfulness practices and yoga philosophy. The practices will incorporate a combination of seated, kneeling, standing and lying postures and transitions between positions with individual modifications provided on an as-needed basis. The yoga classes will be co-designed by registered yoga teachers and taught by two trained and experienced and yoga teachers blinded to study testing measures.
Interventions
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Balance Flow Yoga
The yoga class is based on hatha yoga which includes physical poses and mindful movement integrated with breath. Conducted in a local yoga studio for 75 minutes duration, twice per week and also open to the public. The specific yoga techniques reflect the objectives of our study and focus on addressing some of the physical, mental and emotional factors that potentially contribute to falls such as balance, balance confidence, strength, coordination, proprioception, core training strategies, and breathing techniques integrated with mindfulness practices and yoga philosophy. The practices will incorporate a combination of seated, kneeling, standing and lying postures and transitions between positions with individual modifications provided on an as-needed basis. The yoga classes will be co-designed by registered yoga teachers and taught by two trained and experienced and yoga teachers blinded to study testing measures.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
* any recent upper extremity (UE), neck or back injury, or other painful joint problem that significantly limits day to day activities
* distal radius fracture in the past two years, any fracture in the past year, or a history of multiple fractures of the wrist or forearm
* any history of UE neurological problems (i.e. Stroke, Multiple Sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, reflex neuropathy)
* any cardio-vascular problems that would contradict maximum effort strength assessment
* presence of a joint replacement (i.e. hip or knee)
* unable to safely ambulate independently (with or without a walking aid) in the community.
50 Years
70 Years
FEMALE
Yes
Sponsors
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University of Saskatchewan
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Cathy Arnold
Professor
Locations
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University of Saskatchewan
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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Bio 17-64
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id