Yoga
helps older women balance, stand taller
NEW
YORK
- Elderly women showed measurable improvements in
their walking speed and balance after a nine-week yoga
program—and they gained a centimeter in height, on
average, Philadelphia researchers report.
“The
only explanation may be that they are standing more upright,
not so much crouching,” study chief Dr. Jinsup Song of
Temple University told Reuters Health. Song presented the
findings April 4 at the Gait and Clinical Movement Analysis
Society’s Annual Meeting.
While
past studies have investigated yoga for helping improve
balance in elderly women, Song noted, they have typically
used a relatively demanding form of the practice. In the
current study, he and his colleague Marian Garfinkel, a
certified yoga instructor, worked with B.K.S. Iyengar, the
originator of Iyengar Yoga, to develop a program
specifically designed for older people. “The poses were
very basic—how to stand upward, how to bend forward,
sideways,” said Song, who admitted he found some of the
poses challenging himself.
Song
and colleagues enrolled 24 women aged 65 and older into
their study. The women performed an hour-and-a-half yoga
session twice a week, gradually building up the intensity of
the exercise.
After
the program, the women walked faster, used longer strides,
and could stand for a longer time on one leg. They also felt
more confident in their ability to balance while standing
and walking.
While
the women had been balancing their weight on the ball of the
foot as they walked before they had yoga training,
afterwards their weight was more evenly distributed across
the bottom of their feet as they walked, Song noted, which
could contribute to greater stability.
Song,
who is a podiatrist, noted that both strength and
flexibility are important for helping people avoid falls, a
leading cause of disability among older people, especially
women. He and his colleagues are planning further studies to
determine if the Iyengar program is an effective fall
prevention strategy.
Reuters
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