• Skip navigation
  • Skip to navigation
  • Skip to the bottom
Simulate organization breadcrumb open Simulate organization breadcrumb close
Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Chair of Health Psychology
  • FAUTo the central FAU website
  1. Friedrich-Alexander-Universität
  2. Philosophische Fakultät und Fachbereich Theologie
  3. Department Psychologie
Suche öffnen
  • en
  • de
  • Campo
  • StudOn
  • FAUdir
  • Jobs
  • Map
  • Help
  1. Friedrich-Alexander-Universität
  2. Philosophische Fakultät und Fachbereich Theologie
  3. Department Psychologie
Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Chair of Health Psychology
Navigation Navigation close
  • Team
  • Research
    • Stress Response Patterns and Health
      • IMMERSE: Cognitive performance in acute stress
      • COST: Role of Coping Strategies in physiological Responses to acute psychosocial Stress
      • Modification of Biological Stress Response Patterns through Experimental Manipulation of Cognitive Coping Strategies
      • HABIT: Role of Anxiety and Coping Strategies in the Habituation to repeated acute Stress
    • Chronic Stress and Health
      • IMMUNE: Immune against stress? – Validation of the German version of the STRAIN
      • Chronic stress level and functional health in older adults: the impact and role of fear of falling
      • PFCS: Protective Factors in chronically stressed Caregivers
      • STING: German Translation and Evaluation of the Stress and Adversity Inventory (STRAIN)
    • Traumatic Stress and Health
      • POSTRES: Characterization of Acute Stress Responses in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
      • Psychobiologische Behandlungseffekte traumafokussierter Maltherapie bei Patienten mit psychischen und physischen Traumafolgestörungen
    • Anxiety and Coping in the Healthcare System
      • ABI-MS: Coping with Medical Procedures – Development of an Inventory
      • VARD: Repressive Coping and the Verbal Autonomic Response Dissociation in a Simulated Medical Stress Situation
    • Digital Stress
      • Gesund Digital Leben – Der bayerische Forschungsverbund forDigitHealth
      • Teamwork Performance: Effects of Tracking Based Feedback Mechanisms on Performance and Health Biomarkers
    • Stress and Health in the Context of Migration
      • Verbal Violence against Migrants in Institutions (VIOLIN)
    Portal Research
  • Publications
  • Biomarker Assay Service
  1. Home
  2. Research
  3. Chronic Stress and Health
  4. Chronic stress level and functional health in older adults: the impact and role of fear of falling

Chronic stress level and functional health in older adults: the impact and role of fear of falling

In page navigation: Research
  • Stress Response Patterns and Health
  • Chronic Stress and Health
    • IMMUNE: Immune against stress? - Validation of the German version of the STRAIN
    • Chronic stress level and functional health in older adults: the impact and role of fear of falling
    • PFCS: Protective Factors in chronically stressed Caregivers
    • STING: German Translation and Evaluation of the Stress and Adversity Inventory (STRAIN)
  • Traumatic Stress and Health
  • Anxiety and Coping in the Healthcare System
  • Teamwork Performance: Effects of Tracking Based Feedback Mechanisms on Performance and Health Biomarkers
  • Digital Stress
  • Stress and Health in the Context of Migration

Chronic stress level and functional health in older adults: the impact and role of fear of falling

FEARFALL: Chronic stress level and functional health in older adults: the impact and role of fear of falling

(Third Party Funds Single)


Project leader: Nicolas Rohleder, Sabine Britting, Robert Kob, Cornel Sieber
Project members: Ellen Freiberger
Start date: 04/01/2022
End date: 07/31/2027
Acronym: FEARFALL
Funding source: DFG-Einzelförderung / Sachbeihilfe (EIN-SBH)

Abstract:

Maintenance of physical function, mobility and ability to live independently are important goals for older persons. However, this is counteracted by age-related loss of muscle mass, strength and function. Furthermore, this degenerating process can be reinforced if the older person avoids physical activity and exercise due to fear of falling. We established that fall-related psychological concerns (FrPC) are not only leading to decreased physical activity, but are also associated with elevated levels of inflammation. Consistent with that, long-term exposure to adverse psychological conditions, including chronic stress and anxiety, have been linked to the upregulation of inflammatory activity. This chronic low-grade activation of the immune system was shown to intensify the decay of skeletal muscle. Therefore, a vicious, feed-forward cycle of fear of falling, inflammation, loss of muscle mass and decreasing physical function is created that ultimately results in negative health outcomes, i.e. falls, dependence and death. Exercise training alone is not likely to interrupt this cycle, because a person with elevated FrPC would experience high stress and thus more inflammatory cytokines, blunting the anabolic effects of the intervention. Therefore, the planned study will utilize a multi-component intervention with exercise training and cognitive-behavioral components to address FrPCs and oppose muscular decay. For this aim, the expertise of a psychological and a geriatric institute is necessary. The randomized controlled trial will be conducted using established effective training programs for reduction of FrPC. The intervention group will conduct at least one 60 min exercise session per week and an additional home program, while a sham control group will receive a multicomponent intervention including sham activity, cognitive training and educational health lecture at the same frequency. For the operationalization of specific FrPCs the Falls Efficacy Scale - International (FES-I) will be used. Stress and related psychological symptoms will be monitored by established self-reports and by measuring salivary cortisol. Concentrations of Creactive protein (CRP), interleukin 6 (IL-6), interleukin 10 (IL-10) and tumor-necrosis-factoralpha (TNFα), as well as gene expression of select inflammatory transcripts, will be used as surrogate parameters of the inflammatory status at baseline and at several time-points during the intervention and follow-up. This will allow us to test whether the reduction of specific FrPCs or general psychological symptoms will reverse alterations in stress systems, and / or slow down low-grade inflammation. We will measure changes in activity, as well as psychological and biological pathways leading from FrPCs to muscle loss, to disentangle the individual contribution to sarcopenia, and to provide an additional pathway to break or slow-down the vicious cycle of FrPCs and sarcopenia.

Publications:

  • Kemmler W., von Stengel S., Kohl M., Rohleder N., Bertsch T., Sieber C., Freiberger E., Kob R.:
    Safety of a Combined WB-EMS and High-Protein Diet Intervention in Sarcopenic Obese Elderly Men
    In: Clinical Interventions in Aging Volume 15 (2020), p. 953-967
    ISSN: 1176-9092
    DOI: 10.2147/CIA.S248868
Chair of Health Psychology
Prof. Dr. Nicolas Rohleder

Nägelsbachstr. 49a
91052 Erlangen
Germany
  • Imprint
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility
  • Facebook
  • RSS Feed
  • Twitter
  • Xing
Up