A1 Journal article (refereed)
Power of lower extremities and age were the main determinants on the agility test for adults in a cohort of men aged 66-91 years (2021)


Manderoos, S., Wasenius, N. S., Laine, M. K., Kujala, U. M., Mälkiä, E. A., Kaprio, J., Sarna, S., Bäckman, H. M., Kettunen, J. A., Aunola, S., & Eriksson, J. G. (2021). Power of lower extremities and age were the main determinants on the agility test for adults in a cohort of men aged 66-91 years. European Journal of Physiotherapy, 23(2), 122-131. https://doi.org/10.1080/21679169.2019.1650395


JYU authors or editors


Publication details

All authors or editors: Manderoos, Sirpa; Wasenius, Niko S.; Laine, Merja K.; Kujala, Urho M.; Mälkiä, Esko A.; Kaprio, Jaakko; Sarna, Seppo; Bäckman, Heli M.; Kettunen, Jyrki A.; Aunola, Sirkka; et al.

Journal or series: European Journal of Physiotherapy

ISSN: 2167-9169

eISSN: 2167-9177

Publication year: 2021

Volume: 23

Issue number: 2

Pages range: 122-131

Publisher: Informa Healthcare, Taylor & Francis Group

Publication country: United Kingdom

Publication language: English

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/21679169.2019.1650395

Publication open access: Not open

Publication channel open access:

Publication is parallel published (JYX): https://jyx.jyu.fi/handle/123456789/66296


Abstract

Study Design: Cross-sectional study.
Objective: To evaluate the relationship between agility and personal factors, muscle strength and power, mobility, self-reported balance and physical activity among older men.
Methods: Agility was measured by using the Agility Test for Adults (ATA). We studied 100 Finnish male former elite athletes (endurance n = 50; power n = 50) and 50 matched controls aged 66 to 91 years (mean age 75.5 years). The associations between agility and other variables were similar between three groups; thus, multiple linear regression analyses were done by using the pooled data of the participants.
Results: On the basis of multiple linear regression analyses, combination of age (p = .02), self-reported Activities-specific Balance Confidence scale (ABC scale), jumping height (p = .001) and self-rated health explained 26% of the variance in execution time of ATA (R2 = 0.26; p = .000002) among elderly men.
Conclusion: Power of lower extremities and age were the main determinants of the results of ATA in a cohort of men aged 66–91 years. From a clinical point of view, power of lower extremities measured by test demanding explosive power plays an important role to maintain or enhance capacity of agility.


Keywords: ageing; motor skills (general); physical activeness; moving; muscle strength; men

Free keywords: ageing; countermovement jump; feasibility; motor skills; physical functioning


Contributing organizations


Ministry reporting: Yes

Reporting Year: 2021

JUFO rating: 1


Last updated on 2022-20-09 at 15:57