Western Daily Press

Flamingo stance test may help assess risk of death

- ELLA PICKOVER news@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

AFLAMINGO-STYLE balance test should be included in mid-life health check-ups, West researcher­s have said after a new study found that people who could not stand on one leg for 10 seconds had an increased risk of death within seven years.

Asking people to stand on one leg for 10 seconds provided “useful informatio­n regarding mortality risk in middle-aged and older men and women”, researcher­s said.

The team of global researcher­s, including experts from Bristol Medical School, examined data on 1,702 people aged 51 to 75 from Brazil.

When the participan­ts enrolled in the study they gave various medical details and, as part of a health checkup, they were asked to stand on one leg for 10 seconds without any additional support.

To standardis­e the assessment, people were asked to take off their shoes and socks and place the front of the free foot on the back of the opposite lower leg, while keeping their arms by their sides and their gaze fixed straight ahead.

They were allowed three attempts. One in five people (20%) failed to pass the test, with the inability to do so rising with age – 54% of those aged 71 to 75 were unable to balance on one leg for 10 seconds compared to just 5% of 51 to 55-year-olds, 8% of 56 to 60-year-olds, 18% of 61 to 65-year-olds and 37% of 66 to 70-year-olds.

People who failed the test were more likely to be older, be overweight and more likely to have a diagnosis of diabetes.

The study, published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, tracked participan­ts over a number of years.

After an average follow-up time of seven years, 123 people had died, or 7% of the participan­ts.

Some 17.5% of people who failed the test were among those who had died, compared to 4.6% of those who passed.

After accounting for various factors, the researcher­s concluded that an inability to stand unsupporte­d on one leg for 10 seconds was associated with an 84% increased risk of death during the follow-up period.

“Routinely using the static balance test in adults with a wide age range and diverse clinical conditions, the test has been remarkably safe, wellreceiv­ed by the participan­ts and, importantl­y, simple to incorporat­e in our routine practice as it requires less than one or two minutes to be applied,” they wrote.

They concluded that the 10-second balance assessment “provides rapid and objective feedback for the patient and health profession­als regarding static balance”, and that the test “adds useful informatio­n regarding mortality risk in middleaged and older men and women”.

“There is potential benefit to including the 10-second one-legged stance (test) as part of routine physical examinatio­n in middle-aged and older adults.”

There is potential benefit to including the 10-second one-legged stance (test) as part of routine physical examinatio­n in middleaged and older adults BRISTOL MEDICAL SCHOOL

 ?? Picture: Igor Rybaltchen­ko ?? Older adults who are unable to stand on one leg – flamingo style – for 10 seconds are at greater risk of death within seven years than those who can hold the stance, new research by medical experts suggests
Picture: Igor Rybaltchen­ko Older adults who are unable to stand on one leg – flamingo style – for 10 seconds are at greater risk of death within seven years than those who can hold the stance, new research by medical experts suggests

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