Zimmerman Molly E, Lipton Richard B, Pan Jullie W, Hetherington Hoby P, Verghese Joe
Saul R. Korey Department of Neurology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1165 Morris Park Avenue, Room 343, Bronx, NY 10461, USA.
Brain Res. 2009 Sep 29;1291:73-81. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2009.07.043. Epub 2009 Jul 23.
Gait measures have been shown to predict cognitive decline and dementia in older adults. Investigation of the neurobiology associated with locomotor function is needed to elucidate this relationship with cognitive abilities. This study aimed to examine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI; hippocampal volume)- and proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS; N-acetylaspartate to creatine (NAA/Cr) ratios)-derived hippocampal correlates of quantitative gait function (swing time (seconds), stride length (cm), and stride length variability (standard deviation)) in a subset of 48 nondemented older adults (24 males; mean age=81 years) drawn from the Einstein Aging Study, a community-based sample of individuals over the age of 70 residing in Bronx, New York. Linear regression analyses controlling for age were used to examine hippocampal volume and neurochemistry as predictors of gait function. We found that stride length was associated with hippocampal volume (beta=0.36, p=0.03; overall model R(2)=0.33, p=0.01), but not hippocampal neurochemistry (beta=0.09, p=0.48). Stride length variability was more strongly associated with hippocampal NAA/Cr (beta=-0.38, p=0.01; overall model R(2)=0.14, p=0.04) than hippocampal volume (beta=-0.33, p=0.08). Gait swing time was not significantly related to any neuroimaging measure. These relationships remained significant after accounting for memory and clinical gait impairments. These findings suggest that nondemented older adults exhibit increased stride length variability that is associated with lower levels of hippocampal neuronal metabolism, but not hippocampal volume. Conversely, decreased stride length is associated with smaller hippocampal volumes, but not hippocampal neurochemistry. Distinct neurobiological hippocampal substrates may support decreased stride length and increased stride length variability in older adults.
步态测量已被证明可预测老年人的认知衰退和痴呆症。需要对与运动功能相关的神经生物学进行研究,以阐明这种与认知能力的关系。本研究旨在检查48名非痴呆老年人(24名男性;平均年龄 = 81岁)的定量步态功能(摆动时间(秒)、步长(厘米)和步长变异性(标准差))与磁共振成像(MRI;海马体积)和质子磁共振波谱(MRS;N - 乙酰天门冬氨酸与肌酸(NAA/Cr)比值)得出的海马相关性,这些老年人来自爱因斯坦衰老研究,该研究是纽约布朗克斯区70岁以上居民的社区样本。使用控制年龄的线性回归分析来检查海马体积和神经化学作为步态功能的预测指标。我们发现步长与海马体积相关(β = 0.36,p = 0.03;总体模型R² = 0.33,p = 0.01),但与海马神经化学无关(β = 0.09,p = 0.48)。步长变异性与海马NAA/Cr的相关性(β = -0.38,p = 0.01;总体模型R² = 0.14,p = 0.04)比与海马体积的相关性(β = -0.33,p = 0.08)更强。步态摆动时间与任何神经影像学测量均无显著相关性。在考虑记忆和临床步态障碍后,这些关系仍然显著。这些发现表明,非痴呆老年人步长变异性增加,这与海马神经元代谢水平较低有关,但与海马体积无关。相反,步长减小与较小的海马体积有关,但与海马神经化学无关。不同的海马神经生物学底物可能支持老年人步长减小和步长变异性增加。