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COGNITIVE FUNCTION CONTRIBUTES TO THE NONLINEAR RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AGE AND DUAL-TASK GAIT IN MID-AGED POPULATION

The capacity to maintain safe walking is critical to functional independence in older adults. However, the timing/stage when such capacity starts to diminish, and its potential contributors have not been well characterized. To explore that, we here conducted analysis based upon the data of 651 parti...

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Autores principales: Zhou, Junhong, Cattaneo, Gabriele, Yu, Wanting, Gouskova, Natalia, Lipsitz, Lewis, Pascual-Leone, Alvaro, Bartres-Faz, David, Manor, Brad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9766006/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.914
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author Zhou, Junhong
Cattaneo, Gabriele
Yu, Wanting
Gouskova, Natalia
Lipsitz, Lewis
Pascual-Leone, Alvaro
Bartres-Faz, David
Manor, Brad
author_facet Zhou, Junhong
Cattaneo, Gabriele
Yu, Wanting
Gouskova, Natalia
Lipsitz, Lewis
Pascual-Leone, Alvaro
Bartres-Faz, David
Manor, Brad
author_sort Zhou, Junhong
collection PubMed
description The capacity to maintain safe walking is critical to functional independence in older adults. However, the timing/stage when such capacity starts to diminish, and its potential contributors have not been well characterized. To explore that, we here conducted analysis based upon the data of 651 participants of age between 40 and 65 years from Barcelona Brain Health Initiative Study. Each participants completed: 1) one 45-second trial of walking normally (single-task) and while performing a serial-subtraction-by-three task (dual-task), of which gait was measured using a smartphone-based gait-assessment application; and 2) a battery of cognitive tests. The dual-task cost (DTC) (i.e., percent changes from single- to dual-task condition) to mean stride time (ST) and stride time variability (STV) and the score of global cognitive function were obtained. The LOESS analyses demonstrated nonlinear relationships between age and DTCs with a turning point at age of 54 years (R2>3%). Regression models showed significantly greater associations (p=0.01~0.03) between age and DTCs (i.e., older age, worse gait) (β=0.22~0.28, p< 0.006), as well as between global cognitive function and DTCs (β=-0.28~-0.18, p< 0.002), in older group (i.e., age≥54 years) compared to younger group. The structural-equation-modeling suggested that in older group, cognitive function mediated the relationship between age and dual-task gait (p< 0.02) with a contribution of 43~47% to such relationship. The observations here revealed that as early at age of 54 years, dual-task gait starts to significantly diminish, and its dependence on cognitive function dramatically increases, providing critical knowledge for the management of mobility and cognitive aging in mid-age population.
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spelling pubmed-97660062022-12-20 COGNITIVE FUNCTION CONTRIBUTES TO THE NONLINEAR RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AGE AND DUAL-TASK GAIT IN MID-AGED POPULATION Zhou, Junhong Cattaneo, Gabriele Yu, Wanting Gouskova, Natalia Lipsitz, Lewis Pascual-Leone, Alvaro Bartres-Faz, David Manor, Brad Innov Aging Abstracts The capacity to maintain safe walking is critical to functional independence in older adults. However, the timing/stage when such capacity starts to diminish, and its potential contributors have not been well characterized. To explore that, we here conducted analysis based upon the data of 651 participants of age between 40 and 65 years from Barcelona Brain Health Initiative Study. Each participants completed: 1) one 45-second trial of walking normally (single-task) and while performing a serial-subtraction-by-three task (dual-task), of which gait was measured using a smartphone-based gait-assessment application; and 2) a battery of cognitive tests. The dual-task cost (DTC) (i.e., percent changes from single- to dual-task condition) to mean stride time (ST) and stride time variability (STV) and the score of global cognitive function were obtained. The LOESS analyses demonstrated nonlinear relationships between age and DTCs with a turning point at age of 54 years (R2>3%). Regression models showed significantly greater associations (p=0.01~0.03) between age and DTCs (i.e., older age, worse gait) (β=0.22~0.28, p< 0.006), as well as between global cognitive function and DTCs (β=-0.28~-0.18, p< 0.002), in older group (i.e., age≥54 years) compared to younger group. The structural-equation-modeling suggested that in older group, cognitive function mediated the relationship between age and dual-task gait (p< 0.02) with a contribution of 43~47% to such relationship. The observations here revealed that as early at age of 54 years, dual-task gait starts to significantly diminish, and its dependence on cognitive function dramatically increases, providing critical knowledge for the management of mobility and cognitive aging in mid-age population. Oxford University Press 2022-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9766006/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.914 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Zhou, Junhong
Cattaneo, Gabriele
Yu, Wanting
Gouskova, Natalia
Lipsitz, Lewis
Pascual-Leone, Alvaro
Bartres-Faz, David
Manor, Brad
COGNITIVE FUNCTION CONTRIBUTES TO THE NONLINEAR RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AGE AND DUAL-TASK GAIT IN MID-AGED POPULATION
title COGNITIVE FUNCTION CONTRIBUTES TO THE NONLINEAR RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AGE AND DUAL-TASK GAIT IN MID-AGED POPULATION
title_full COGNITIVE FUNCTION CONTRIBUTES TO THE NONLINEAR RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AGE AND DUAL-TASK GAIT IN MID-AGED POPULATION
title_fullStr COGNITIVE FUNCTION CONTRIBUTES TO THE NONLINEAR RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AGE AND DUAL-TASK GAIT IN MID-AGED POPULATION
title_full_unstemmed COGNITIVE FUNCTION CONTRIBUTES TO THE NONLINEAR RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AGE AND DUAL-TASK GAIT IN MID-AGED POPULATION
title_short COGNITIVE FUNCTION CONTRIBUTES TO THE NONLINEAR RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AGE AND DUAL-TASK GAIT IN MID-AGED POPULATION
title_sort cognitive function contributes to the nonlinear relationship between age and dual-task gait in mid-aged population
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9766006/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.914
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