Updated
Updated · studyfinds.com · Jun 9
Study Finds Aging Ankles Stiffen in 107 Adults, Cutting Push-Off Efficiency
Updated
Updated · studyfinds.com · Jun 9

Study Finds Aging Ankles Stiffen in 107 Adults, Cutting Push-Off Efficiency

3 articles · Updated · studyfinds.com · Jun 9

Summary

  • 107 adults aged 26 to 86 showed a clear age-linked shift in walking: older participants' ankles acted more like stabilizing braces than propulsion engines, with weaker late-step push-off despite higher muscle activity.
  • During stance, opposing shin and calf muscles increasingly fired at the same time, stiffening the joint when it should move more freely; researchers tie that pattern to declining joint-position sensing and a stability-first nervous-system response.
  • Force and motion data from barefoot walks over a 12-meter path showed older adults kept the ankle more upward-tilted during push-off and generated less forward-driving force, helping explain slower, more fatiguing walking.
  • The authors say rehabilitation may need to target muscle timing, tendon function and proprioception—not just leg strength—though the cross-sectional study cannot prove how any one person's gait changes over time.

Insights

If ankle stiffness is a natural safety brake for aging, could exercises to 'fix' it actually increase the real risk of falling?
How can VR and smart wearables help our brains relearn youthful walking patterns and overcome the hesitations of age?
As our bodies trade speed for stability, can we retrain our nervous system to undo this 'safety-first' approach to walking?