Weeks D L, Forget R, Mouchnino L, Gravel D, Bourbonnais D
Departmentof Physical Therapy, Regis University, Denver, CO 80221, USA.
Gerontology. 2003 Jul-Aug;49(4):225-32. doi: 10.1159/000070402.
Due to the often-reported decrease in postural stability in the elderly, it is important to understand factors that may contribute to reduced postural stability. It is possible that attention-demanding focal tasks performed concurrent with postural regulation influence postural stability.
This study utilized dual-task methodology to determine if motor or cognitive focal tasks interact with center of pressure (COP) excursion during static bipedal stance in healthy young and healthy elderly subjects (n = 18).
The cognitive task involved silently solving an orally-presented multi-step arithmetic problem over a 30-second period. The motor task was a 30-second bilateral static finger-thumb pinch task performed at 10% of maximal voluntary contraction with a pair of pinch-force transducers. Each focal task was performed separately, and in a condition in which both tasks were performed simultaneously. COP excursion was compared in quiet standing (no focal task) and during performance of the focal tasks with full vision and with vision occluded.
Performance on the focal tasks was unaffected by increased postural demands during stance as compared to a seated baseline condition. This was the case for both age groups, and for the full vision and occluded vision conditions. Medio-lateral COP excursion was reduced over the quiet standing pretest condition when attentional focus was on the cognitive task, suggesting that COP was influenced centrally during cognition. In contrast, COP excursion increased over the quiet standing pretest condition when performing the motor focal task, suggesting a reduced ability to suppress sway when the motor system was concurrently occupied with a voluntary task that shared the same input-output resources.
The ability to share attentional resources among focal and postural tasks was similar in healthy young and elderly subjects.
由于经常有报道称老年人的姿势稳定性会下降,因此了解可能导致姿势稳定性降低的因素非常重要。在进行姿势调节的同时执行需要注意力的焦点任务可能会影响姿势稳定性。
本研究采用双任务方法,以确定在健康的年轻和健康的老年受试者(n = 18)的静态双足站立过程中,运动或认知焦点任务是否与压力中心(COP)偏移相互作用。
认知任务包括在30秒内默默解决一个口头提出的多步骤算术问题。运动任务是使用一对捏力传感器以最大自主收缩的10%进行30秒的双侧静态手指-拇指捏合任务。每个焦点任务分别进行,并且在两个任务同时进行的条件下进行。比较了安静站立(无焦点任务)以及在焦点任务执行过程中全视野和视野被遮挡情况下的COP偏移。
与坐姿基线条件相比,在站立过程中增加的姿势需求并未影响焦点任务的表现。两个年龄组以及全视野和视野被遮挡条件下均是如此。当注意力集中在认知任务上时,与安静站立预测试条件相比,中-侧COP偏移减少,这表明在认知过程中COP受到中枢影响。相反,在执行运动焦点任务时,与安静站立预测试条件相比,COP偏移增加,这表明当运动系统同时忙于一项共享相同输入-输出资源的自愿任务时,抑制摆动的能力降低。
在健康的年轻和老年受试者中,在焦点任务和姿势任务之间共享注意力资源的能力相似。