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Unexpected stopping highlights age-related changes in movement strategy. Older adults shift from a distal-driven braking to proximal, multi-joint co-contraction strategy, characterized by increased hip work, reduced knee work, and greater muscle synergy complexity. This proximal engagement reflects a tradeoff along the stability-efficiency continuum: it enhances safety but increases metabolic cost and postural sway. By disrupting the distal-to-proximal control sequence, this compensatory strategy likely increases postural sway and fall risk. Targeted rehabilitation focusing on eccentric quadriceps and ankle control, such as stand-to-sit and step-down drills, may help restore distal-driven balance recovery and reduce fall risk during adaptive (reactive) walking.
Jeon et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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