Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Seniors who practice tai chi have improved fitness

March 14, 2010 by David Bendall · Leave a Comment 

Researchers at the National Taiwan University Hospital in Taipei compared investigated the fitness level of seniors who practice tai chi to sedentary controls matched by age and body size. 22 male and 19 female tai chi practitioners with an average age of 69 and 12 years of tai chi practice were compared to 18 male [...]

Long term tai chi practitioners show improved finger pointing accuracy.

March 13, 2010 by David Bendall · Leave a Comment 

Researchers at Hong Kong Polytechnic University compared the effects of age and tai chi on eye-hand coordination. The study consisted of three groups, a younger control group consisting of 30 university students with an average age of 24, a elderly control group consisting of 30 healthy non-tai chi practicing adults with an average age of [...]

Tai chi associated with improved eye-hand coordination in the elderly.

March 13, 2010 by David Bendall · Leave a Comment 

Researchers at Ghang Gung Memorial Hospital in Taiwan studied the effect of tai chi on eye-hand coordination in the elderly. 22 elderly individuals who had practiced tai chi regularly for at least 3 years were compared to a control group of 20 healthy and active elderly individuals who did not practice tai chi. The tai [...]

Older tai chi practitioners found to have improved balance confidence.

May 25, 2009 by David Bendall · Leave a Comment 

Researchers at Hong Kong Polytechnic University compared 24 older tai chi practitioners to 24 healthy older adults who were matched with respect to age, gender, height, weight and physical activity. The tai chi practitioners had better knee muscle strength, less body sway after single-leg, perturbations and higher balance confidence scores. Abstract

Long-term tai chi practitioners found to have improved knee and ankle proprioception.

May 22, 2009 by David Bendall · Leave a Comment 

Researchers at the Chinese University of Hong Kong compared knee and ankle proprioception among elderly adults who were long-term tai chi practitioners, swimmers, runners or who were sedentary. The long-term tai chi practitioners had better knee and ankle proprioception than the sedentary group and better ankle proprioception than the swimming and running group as well. [...]

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