Journal Article DZNE-2020-05613

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Gait Is Associated with Cognitive Flexibility: A Dual-Tasking Study in Healthy Older People.

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2017
Frontiers Research Foundation Lausanne

Frontiers in aging neuroscience 9, 154 () [10.3389/fnagi.2017.00154]

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Abstract: Objectives: To analyze which gait parameters are primarily influenced by cognitive flexibility, and whether such an effect depends on the walking condition used. Design: Cross-sectional analysis. Setting: Tübingen evaluation of Risk factors for Early detection of Neurodegenerative Disorders. Participants: A total of 661 non-demented individuals (49-80 years). Measurements: A gait assessment with four conditions was performed: a 20 m walk at convenient speed (C), at fast speed (F), at fast speed while checking boxes (FB), and while subtracting serial 7s (FS). Seven gait parameters from a wearable sensor-unit (McRoberts, Netherlands) were compared with delta Trail-Making-Test (dTMT) values, which is a measure of cognitive flexibility. Walking strategies of good and poor dTMT performers were compared by evaluating the patterns of gait parameters across conditions. Results: Five parameters correlated significantly with the dTMT in the FS condition, two parameters in the F and FB condition, and none in the C condition. Overall correlations were relatively weak. Gait speed was the gait parameter that most strongly correlated with the dTMT (r2 = 7.4%). In good, but not poor, dTMT performers differences between FB and FS were significantly different in variability-associated gait parameters. Conclusion: Older individuals need cognitive flexibility to perform difficult walking conditions. This association is best seen in gait speed. New and particularly relevant for recognition and training of deficits is that older individuals with poor cognitive flexibility have obviously fewer resources to adapt to challenging walking conditions. Our findings partially explain gait deficits in older adults with poor cognitive flexibility.

Classification:

Contributing Institute(s):
  1. Ext Universitätsklinikum Tübingen (Ext UKT)
  2. Ext UKT TREND Studie (Ext UKT-Trend)
  3. Parkinson's Disease Genetics AG Berg (AG Berg)
  4. Core ICRU (Core ICRU)
  5. Functional Neurogeriatrics (AG Maetzler)
Research Program(s):
  1. 345 - Population Studies and Genetics (POF3-345) (POF3-345)
  2. 344 - Clinical and Health Care Research (POF3-344) (POF3-344)
  3. 342 - Disease Mechanisms and Model Systems (POF3-342) (POF3-342)

Appears in the scientific report 2017
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Medline ; Creative Commons Attribution CC BY (No Version) ; DOAJ ; OpenAccess ; BIOSIS Previews ; Clarivate Analytics Master Journal List ; DOAJ Seal ; IF >= 5 ; JCR ; SCOPUS ; Web of Science Core Collection
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Institute Collections > TÜ DZNE > TÜ DZNE-Ext UKT\-Trend
Document types > Articles > Journal Article
Institute Collections > TÜ DZNE > TÜ DZNE-AG Maetzler
Institute Collections > TÜ DZNE > TÜ DZNE-Ext UKT
Institute Collections > TÜ DZNE > TÜ DZNE-AG Berg
Institute Collections > TÜ DZNE > TÜ DZNE-ICRU
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 Record created 2020-02-18, last modified 2024-03-21


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