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Gait Velocity Is an Indicator of Cognitive Performance in Healthy Middle-Aged Adults

Psychomotor retardation, especially motor and cognitive slowing down, has been described many times in the elderly but to our knowledge, has never been examined in healthy middle-aged adults. The present study explores whether walking time may provide an early signal of cognitive performance, using...

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Autores principales: Jabourian, Artin, Lancrenon, Sylvie, Delva, Catherine, Perreve-Genet, Alain, Lablanchy, Jean-Pierre, Jabourian, Maritza
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4121134/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25089518
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0103211
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author Jabourian, Artin
Lancrenon, Sylvie
Delva, Catherine
Perreve-Genet, Alain
Lablanchy, Jean-Pierre
Jabourian, Maritza
author_facet Jabourian, Artin
Lancrenon, Sylvie
Delva, Catherine
Perreve-Genet, Alain
Lablanchy, Jean-Pierre
Jabourian, Maritza
author_sort Jabourian, Artin
collection PubMed
description Psychomotor retardation, especially motor and cognitive slowing down, has been described many times in the elderly but to our knowledge, has never been examined in healthy middle-aged adults. The present study explores whether walking time may provide an early signal of cognitive performance, using 266 healthy adults ([18–65] years old, mean age: 45.7±12.9 years) who were also subdivided in 2 groups: under or over 50. Walking time (50 meters) and cognitive performances (mini-mental state examination, Benton Visual Retention Test and Rey Complex Figure) were assessed; total psychometric score was the sum of individual test scores. Analyses were controlled for age, gender, education level, height and weight. The mean psychometric scores were within the normal range. A substantial proportion of subjects exhibited low performance in some aspects of visuospatial memory, particularly in the older subset. In the total population, walking time was negatively correlated with all cognitive tests, particularly to total psychometric score (R = −0.817, p<0.0001); the unique contribution of walking time on all cognitive scores was very high (delta R-squared = 0.496). In the older subset, performances on walk and cognition were lower than in the younger subset. Total psychometric score showed the strongest correlation with walking time in the older subset (R = −0.867; p<0.001). In all subsets, walking time was the main explanatory variable of the total psychometric score (delta R-squared: ≤ 49 = 0.361; ≥50 = 0.613). These findings indicate that i) a significant proportion of adults without cognitive complaints exhibit low cognitive performance including visuospatial memory and longer walking time, ii) cognitive functioning is strongly correlated to walking time in healthy middle-aged adults, iii) gait velocity (GV) could be an indicator of cognitive performance in some important cognitive domains. These results warrant further investigation because such data may represent a marker for the detection of middle-aged adults who are at risk for further cognitive decline.
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spelling pubmed-41211342014-08-05 Gait Velocity Is an Indicator of Cognitive Performance in Healthy Middle-Aged Adults Jabourian, Artin Lancrenon, Sylvie Delva, Catherine Perreve-Genet, Alain Lablanchy, Jean-Pierre Jabourian, Maritza PLoS One Research Article Psychomotor retardation, especially motor and cognitive slowing down, has been described many times in the elderly but to our knowledge, has never been examined in healthy middle-aged adults. The present study explores whether walking time may provide an early signal of cognitive performance, using 266 healthy adults ([18–65] years old, mean age: 45.7±12.9 years) who were also subdivided in 2 groups: under or over 50. Walking time (50 meters) and cognitive performances (mini-mental state examination, Benton Visual Retention Test and Rey Complex Figure) were assessed; total psychometric score was the sum of individual test scores. Analyses were controlled for age, gender, education level, height and weight. The mean psychometric scores were within the normal range. A substantial proportion of subjects exhibited low performance in some aspects of visuospatial memory, particularly in the older subset. In the total population, walking time was negatively correlated with all cognitive tests, particularly to total psychometric score (R = −0.817, p<0.0001); the unique contribution of walking time on all cognitive scores was very high (delta R-squared = 0.496). In the older subset, performances on walk and cognition were lower than in the younger subset. Total psychometric score showed the strongest correlation with walking time in the older subset (R = −0.867; p<0.001). In all subsets, walking time was the main explanatory variable of the total psychometric score (delta R-squared: ≤ 49 = 0.361; ≥50 = 0.613). These findings indicate that i) a significant proportion of adults without cognitive complaints exhibit low cognitive performance including visuospatial memory and longer walking time, ii) cognitive functioning is strongly correlated to walking time in healthy middle-aged adults, iii) gait velocity (GV) could be an indicator of cognitive performance in some important cognitive domains. These results warrant further investigation because such data may represent a marker for the detection of middle-aged adults who are at risk for further cognitive decline. Public Library of Science 2014-08-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4121134/ /pubmed/25089518 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0103211 Text en © 2014 Jabourian et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jabourian, Artin
Lancrenon, Sylvie
Delva, Catherine
Perreve-Genet, Alain
Lablanchy, Jean-Pierre
Jabourian, Maritza
Gait Velocity Is an Indicator of Cognitive Performance in Healthy Middle-Aged Adults
title Gait Velocity Is an Indicator of Cognitive Performance in Healthy Middle-Aged Adults
title_full Gait Velocity Is an Indicator of Cognitive Performance in Healthy Middle-Aged Adults
title_fullStr Gait Velocity Is an Indicator of Cognitive Performance in Healthy Middle-Aged Adults
title_full_unstemmed Gait Velocity Is an Indicator of Cognitive Performance in Healthy Middle-Aged Adults
title_short Gait Velocity Is an Indicator of Cognitive Performance in Healthy Middle-Aged Adults
title_sort gait velocity is an indicator of cognitive performance in healthy middle-aged adults
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4121134/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25089518
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0103211
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