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Standing balance on inclined surfaces with different friction

Authors :
Ingrid Svensson
Chuansi Gao
Gunvor Gard
Amitava Halder
Måns Magnusson
Source :
Industrial Health
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
National Institute of Industrial Health, 2018.

Abstract

Working and walking environments often involve standing positions on different surfaces with inclination and different friction. In this study, standing balance of thirteen participants during sudden and irregular external perturbation to calf muscles was investigated. The aim of the study was to evaluate the combined effect of surface inclination and friction on standing balance. The main findings when eyes closed revealed that the standing utilised coefficient of friction (mu(SUCOF)) increased when the surface was inclined for both high and low friction materials. The anteriorposterior torque increased more anteriorly when the surface was inclined toes down and when the surface friction was low. The results indicate that the anterior posterior torque is a sensitive parameter when evaluating standing balance ability and slip risk. On inclined surface, particularly on the surface with lower friction, the potential slip and fall risk is higher due to the increase of standing utilised coefficient of friction and increased forward turning torque. Validerad;2018;Nivå 2;2018-08-09 (andbra)

Details

ISSN :
18808026 and 00198366
Volume :
56
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Industrial Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....364132b2b21995c4c1debf0c9abd65a0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2486/indhealth.2018-0005