Week 9 Material Flashcards
Changes in connective tissue with aging.
Decreased proliferation and altered regulation of apoptosis; less responsive to circulating growth factors. They will have less responsive to adaptions in loading; older adults will be depressing synthesis. The connective tissue has a decreased ability to maintain water.
Changes in cartilage with aging.
Damage may occur with excessive loading with limited capacity for healing. Calcification of articular cartilage occurs with age, independent of OA, leading to decreased hydration and compromised viscoelastic properties.
Changes in skeletal muscle with aging.
Age-related to loss of muscle, and sarcopenia. Metabolic changes alter the muscle’s hypertrophic response.
Changes in bone with aging.
Subchondral bone in some joints declines with age. Osteopenia occurs with aging due to increased osteoblast and decreased osteoblast function, leading to an increased risk of osteoporosis and decreased ability to absorb the load.
Functional implications of MSK changes with aging.
Loss of ROM, pain, activity and participation restriction, morbidity and mortality.
Cardiopulmonary changes with aging.
Decreased maximal HR and decreased stroke volume will lead to decreased cardiac output. Decreased lung volume, decreased oxygen saturation, and decreased impaired peripheral oxygen utilization will lead to decreased oxygen delivery. Overall, we will see a decrease in aerobic capacity.
Sensory changes with aging.
Decline in somatic senses. Dizziness and vertigo leads to increased risk for falls. Vision and hearing declines rapidly between 60-80 years of age, leading to decreased acuity, contrast sensitivity, dark adaptation, depth perception, cataracts, and macular degeneration. Decreased taste/smell after 60 years old. These changes make it more likely to fall in new or novel situations compared to younger adults.
Neurological changes with aging.
Loss of myelin: slow conduction, slow response time
Axonal loss: decreased muscle activation, reduced sensory perception, slows or altered systemic function.
Waste products accumulate between (plaques) and inside (neurofibrillary tangles) neurons. These changes can lead to difficulty reaching to loss of balance quickly enough to prevent a fall; loss of gastric motility; loss of sensation can lead to risk of injury; and neurofibrillary tangles can be predictive of cognitive decline.
Neurological changes with aging, related to the brain.
Neuronal atrophy/cell death will lead to loss of gray matter. Axonal loss and decreased myelination will lead to loss of white matter. Loss is NOT uniform in distribution:
-Prefrontal cortex, striatum, temporal lobe, cerebellum, and hippocampus most impacted.
Information processing with aging.
Decreased sensory input, slower reaction time (simple is more minimal compared to choice RT), will choose accuracy over speed (they are more concerned with successful completion rather than how quick they complete the task), and performance declines may be attenuated by compensation, cognitive, and perceptual training.
We can see the quickest reaction time in older adults when the motor task is…
Being performed with repetitive movement and without irrelevant stimuli.
Older adults are more likely to prioritize motor or cognitive over motor or cognitive tasks.
Motor over cognitive tasks
Memory changes with aging.
Working memory: they are still able to chunk, but they do it in smaller chunks.
Episodic memory: retrieval declines.
Semantic memory and remote memory: less age-related decline.
Procedural memory: difficult to accurately evaluate, minimal decline in highly automatic tasks.
Postural changes with aging.
Postural alignment: forward head, thoracic kyphosis, and increased lumbar lordosis.
Habitual postures lead to gradual overstretching/weakening of extensor muscles and shortening of flexor muscles, leading to decreased ROM.
These changes may alter the COG or lead to other compensatory postural changes to compensate for this.
Steady-state control changes with aging.
Steady-state control: increased sway during steady state, reduced limits of stability. The increased sway may be in part used to enhance sensory inputs, we will see this in ALL directions.
We do need to challenge the system to determine an individual’s true capacity; we can achieve this by having them close their eyes or decreasing their BOS.