Adaptation to repeated standing-slips in professional ballet dancers DOI
Caroline Simpkins, Feng Yang

Journal of Biomechanics, Journal Year: 2023, Volume and Issue: 152, P. 111572 - 111572

Published: March 31, 2023

Language: Английский

Association of Dance-Based Mind-Motor Activities With Falls and Physical Function Among Healthy Older Adults DOI Creative Commons
Michèle Mattle, Patricia Chocano-Bedoya, Melanie Kistler-Fischbacher

et al.

JAMA Network Open, Journal Year: 2020, Volume and Issue: 3(9), P. e2017688 - e2017688

Published: Sept. 25, 2020

Importance

Falls increase morbidity and mortality in adults 65 years older. The role of dance-based mind-motor activities preventing falls among healthy older is not well established.

Objective

To assess the effectiveness falls.

Data Sources

Systematic search included PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, Web Science, CINAHL, PsychINFO, Abstracts Social Gerontology, AgeLine, AMED, Scopus databases from database inception to February 18, 2018, using Medical Subject Headingsaged older,accidental falls, anddancing.

Study Selection

This systematic review meta-analysis 29 randomized clinical trials that evaluated a activity with regard fall risk, rate, or well-established measures physical function domains balance, mobility, strength. studies targeted participants without comorbidities associated higher risk. Dance-based were defined as coordinated upright movements emphasize dynamic structured through music an inner rhythm (eg, breathing) distinctive instructions choreography, involve social interaction. Extraction Synthesis Standardized independent screening, data extraction, bias assessment performed. Data pooled random-effects models. study followed Preferred Reporting Items for Reviews Meta-analyses (PRISMA) guideline.

Main Outcomes Measures

Primary outcomes risk falling rate For secondary end points (balance, strength), standardized mean differences (SMDs) estimated (Hedgesg).

Results

In this trials, significantly reduced (37%) (risk ratio, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.49-0.80; 8 1579 participants) (31%) (incidence 0.69; 0.53-0.89; 7 2012 participants). addition, improved balance (standardized difference [SMD], 0.62; 0.33-0.90; 15 1476 participants), mobility (SMD, −0.56; −0.81 −0.31; 13 1379 lower body strength 0.57; 0.23-0.91; 1613 but upper 0.18; −0.03 0.38; 4 414

Conclusion Relevance

Among adults, decreased type may be useful population.

Language: Английский

Citations

60

Performing arts as a health resource? An umbrella review of the health impacts of music and dance participation DOI Creative Commons
J. Matt McCrary,

Emma Redding,

Eckart Altenmüller

et al.

PLoS ONE, Journal Year: 2021, Volume and Issue: 16(6), P. e0252956 - e0252956

Published: June 10, 2021

An increasing body of evidence notes the health benefits arts engagement and participation. However, specific effects optimal modes ‘doses’ participation remain unclear, limiting evidence-based recommendations prescriptions. The performing are most popular form participation, presenting substantial scope for established interest to be leveraged into positive outcomes. Results a three-component umbrella review (PROSPERO ID #: CRD42020191991) relevant systematic reviews (33), epidemiologic studies (9) descriptive (87) demonstrate that is broadly promoting activity. Beneficial were reported in healthy (non-clinical) children, adolescents, adults, older adults across 17 domains (9 supported by moderate-high quality ( GRADE criteria )). Positive associated with as little 30 acute effects) 60 minutes sustained weekly ) drumming both expressive ballroom , social exercise-based aerobic dance Zumba linked broadest benefits. Links between modes/doses unclear conclusions limited still young disparate base. Further research necessary, this providing critical knowledge foundation.

Language: Английский

Citations

43

Dance on: a mixed-method study into the feasibility and effectiveness of a dance programme to increase physical activity levels and wellbeing in adults and older adults DOI Creative Commons
Laura Britten, Ilaria Pina, Camilla Nykjaer

et al.

BMC Geriatrics, Journal Year: 2023, Volume and Issue: 23(1)

Published: Jan. 26, 2023

Physical activity (PA) has beneficial effects on physical and mental health outcomes in older adults. However, a consistent decline PA participation been noted with increasing age, adults consistently being reported as the least physically active population. Previous evidence showed that dance is an appropriate form of it integrates body's movement physical, cognitive, social elements. This study investigated feasibility efficacy weekly programme over 12-month period levels wellbeing.A mixed-method intervention design was used. Community-dwelling aged 55 + years were recruited from local community groups Yorkshire (UK). The comprised 60-min mixed genre class per week. Changes carried forward data self-reported measures (min/week) wellbeing EuroQol visual analogue scale (EQ VAS) across four different time points (baseline, 3, 6 12 months) assessed using Friedman test. Feasibility also through attendance focus (N = 6-9) participants. A thematic analysis qualitative conducted.A total 685 participants (589-89.1% females 72-10.9% males) took part study. mean age 75 ± 10 years, 38% classed highly deprived index multiple deprivation. There statistically significant increase both (X2(3) 192.42, P < 0.001) EQ VAS scores 19.66, 0.001). adherence rate (70%). Themes included reasons for participating programme, perceptions how affected participants, facilitators to programme.The good favourability indicate feasible community-dwelling socially economically diverse communities. positive effect wellbeing. randomised-controlled trial control group required test this further.

Language: Английский

Citations

21

The effect of dance on physical health and cognition in community dwelling older adults: A systematic review and meta-analysis DOI Creative Commons
Amanda M. Clifford,

Joanne Shanahan,

Jennifer McKee

et al.

Arts & Health, Journal Year: 2022, Volume and Issue: 15(2), P. 200 - 228

Published: Aug. 15, 2022

Dancing is an attractive form of exercise among older adults and may positively influence physical psychosocial health. The aim this systematic review was to synthesize the evidence examining dance prescription effectiveness in community dwelling adults.Eight databases were searched identify randomized controlled trials that evaluated programs on community-dwelling from 2007 December 2020. Data regarding participants, outcomes interest extracted narratively synthesized. A meta-analysis performed outcome data where possible.Twenty-two studies met inclusion criteria, those 15 deemed be fair quality 7 high using PEDro scale. Nineteen included found dancing can improve mobility endurance compared no intervention afforded equivalent other programs.The findings suggest effective, safe viable activity for adults..

Language: Английский

Citations

21

Effect of Dancing Interventions on Depression and Anxiety Symptoms in Older Adults: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis DOI Creative Commons
Tiago Paiva Prudente,

Eleazar Mezaiko,

Érika Aparecida Silveira

et al.

Behavioral Sciences, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 14(1), P. 43 - 43

Published: Jan. 10, 2024

This systematic review and meta-analysis (PROSPERO CRD42023428105) investigated the effect of dancing on depression anxiety symptoms in older adults. Conducted up to October 2023, search across seven databases gray literature yielded 5020 records. Only randomized trials that analyzed dance interventions for and/or adults were included. Nineteen trials, involving 508 participants classes lasting 5 weeks 18 months, included 16 subjected meta-analysis. Risk bias was assessed using Cochrane tool. The showed a statistically significant reduction among participating (

Language: Английский

Citations

4

Interaction between visual impairment and subjective cognitive complaints on physical activity impairment in U.S. older adults: NHANES 2005–2008 DOI Creative Commons
Jinyuan Chen, Haoyu Li,

Biting Zhou

et al.

BMC Geriatrics, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 24(1)

Published: Feb. 17, 2024

To investigate the independent relationships of visual impairment (VI) and Subjective cognitive complaints (SCC) with physical function (PFI) interaction effect between VI SCC on PFI in American older adults.

Language: Английский

Citations

4

BALLET PRACTICE IMPROVES NEUROMUSCULAR AND BIOMECHANICAL RESPONSES TO AN UNEXPECTED STANDING-SLIP IN OLDER ADULTS DOI
Caroline Simpkins, Feng Yang

Journal of Neurophysiology, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 132(4), P. 1115 - 1125

Published: Aug. 14, 2024

This is the first study to examine how older ballet dancers respond an unexpected external slip perturbation while standing. The results suggest that experience a reduced fall risk after than their nondancer counterparts. lower can be accounted for by dancers’ quicker neuromuscular reactions result in more effective recovery step and thus higher stability against backward falls due slip.

Language: Английский

Citations

4

Effects of Dance Interventions on Cognition, Psycho-Behavioral Symptoms, Motor Functions, and Quality of Life in Older Adult Patients With Mild Cognitive Impairment: A Meta-Analysis and Systematic Review DOI Creative Commons
Chang Liu, Mengyu Su,

Yuchen Jiao

et al.

Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience, Journal Year: 2021, Volume and Issue: 13

Published: Sept. 20, 2021

Background: Dance interventions are considered beneficial for older patients with mild cognitive impairment in many aspects. We conducted a comprehensive systematic review and meta-analysis to assess the effects of dance on different aspects (cognitive function, emotions, physical quality life) this population. Methods: A search PubMed, Web Science, Cochrane Central Register Controlled Trials, Embase, American Psychological Association PsycInfo, ProQuest, Scopus, Cumulative Index Nursing Allied Health Literature, Chinese BioMedical Literature Database, VIP Database Technical Periodicals, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang Data database was performed. Two reviewers independently assessed study quality. Results: Fourteen studies were retrieved from databases analysis. The pooled results showed that significantly improved global cognition (standardized mean difference [SMD] = 0.73, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.47 0.99, P &lt; 0.00001), rote memory (mean [MD] −2.12, CI: −4.02 −0.21, 0.03), immediate recall (SMD 0.54, 0.30 0.78, 0.0001), delayed 0.56, 0.26 0.86, 0.0002) attention 0.38, 0.13 0.64, 0.003). No significant improvement found executive language, depression, anxiety, dementia-related behavioral symptoms, motor life. Conclusion: benefit most functions. evidence psycho-behavioral function life remains unclear. More trials rigorous designs necessary provide evidence.

Language: Английский

Citations

27

The Impact of Dance Movement Interventions on Psychological Health in Older Adults without Dementia: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis DOI Creative Commons
Odile Sophie Podolski, Tim Whitfield,

Leah Schaaf

et al.

Brain Sciences, Journal Year: 2023, Volume and Issue: 13(7), P. 981 - 981

Published: June 22, 2023

Background: Lifestyle-based multimodal interventions that integrate physical, sensory, cognitive and social enrichment are suggested to promote healthy mental aging resilience against Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Objectives: This meta-analysis examined the efficacy of dance movement (DMI) as an integrated mind–body activity on outcomes psychological health in older adults. Methods: Pre-registration was carried out with PROSPERO (CRD42021265112). PubMed, Web Science PsycINFO were searched for randomized controlled trials (RCT) evaluating effects DMI (>4 weeks’ duration) compared comparators measures (primary outcome) function (additional among adults without dementia (aged ≥55). Data 14 primary RCT (n = 983, n-DMI 494, n-control 489) synthesized using a random robust variance estimation. Results: had small positive effect overall (g 0.30; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.06, 0.53; p 0.02, I2= 65.04) control conditions. Small negative domains well quality life not statistically significant. medium general 0.50; CI: 0.12, 0.89, 79.61) over comparators. None intervention studies evaluated neuroplasticity. Conclusions: We found effective promoting amongst dementia, suggesting tool is potential strategy promotion prevention AD. High-quality needed expand evidence DMI-induced changes specific identify underlying neurophysiological correlates.

Language: Английский

Citations

11

Unleashing the potential of dance: a neuroplasticity-based approach bridging from older adults to Parkinson’s disease patients DOI Creative Commons
Cécil J. W. Meulenberg, Kathrin Rehfeld, Saša Jovanović

et al.

Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience, Journal Year: 2023, Volume and Issue: 15

Published: June 26, 2023

Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder that affects &gt;1% of individuals worldwide and manifested by motor symptoms such as tremor, rigidity, bradykinesia, well non-motor cognitive impairment depression. Non-pharmacological interventions dance therapy are becoming increasingly popular complementary therapies for PD, in addition to pharmacological treatments currently widely available. Dance sensorimotor activity stimulates multiple layers the neural system, including those involved planning execution, sensory integration, processing. healthy older people have been associated with increased activation prefrontal cortex, enhanced functional connectivity between basal ganglia, cerebellum, cortex. Overall, evidence suggests can induce neuroplastic changes participants, leading improvements both functions. involving patients PD show better quality life improved mobility, whereas literature on dance-induced neuroplasticity sparse. Nevertheless, this review argues similar mechanisms may be at work provides insight into potential underlying efficacy, highlights non-pharmacological intervention PD. Further research warranted determine optimal style, intensity, duration maximum therapeutic benefit long-term effects progression.

Language: Английский

Citations

10