Buchman Aron S, Leurgans Sue E, Weiss Aner, Vanderhorst Veronique, Mirelman Anat, Dawe Robert, Barnes Lisa L, Wilson Robert S, Hausdorff Jeffrey M, Bennett David A
Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America ; Department of Neurological Sciences, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America.
Laboratory for Gait and Neurodynamics, Movement Disorders Unit, Department of Neurology, Tel-Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Tel-Aviv, Israel.
PLoS One. 2014 Jan 22;9(1):e86262. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0086262. eCollection 2014.
To provide objective measures which characterize mobility in older adults assessed in the community setting and to examine the extent to which these measures are associated with parkinsonian gait.
During conventional mobility testing in the community-setting, 351 ambulatory non-demented Memory and Aging Project participants wore a belt with a whole body sensor that recorded both acceleration and angular velocity in 3 directions. We used measures derived from these recordings to quantify 5 subtasks including a) walking, b) transition from sit to stand, c) transition from stand to sit, d) turning and e) standing posture. Parkinsonian gait and other mild parkinsonian signs were assessed with a modified version of the original Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (mUPDRS).
In a series of separate regression models which adjusted for age and sex, all 5 mobility subtask measures were associated with parkinsonian gait and accounted for 2% to 32% of its variance. When all 5 subtask measures were considered in a single model, backward elimination showed that measures of walking sit to stand and turning showed independent associations with parkinsonian gait and together accounted for more than 35% of its variance. Cross-validation using data from a 2(nd) group of 258 older adults showed similar results. In similar analyses, only walking was associated with bradykinesia and sway with tremor.
Quantitative mobility subtask measures vary in their associations with parkinsonian gait scores and other parkinsonian signs in older adults. Quantifying the different facets of mobility has the potential to facilitate the clinical characterization and understanding the biologic basis for impaired mobility in older adults.
提供客观测量方法,以描述在社区环境中评估的老年人的运动能力,并研究这些测量方法与帕金森步态的关联程度。
在社区环境中的传统运动测试期间,351名非痴呆、能行走的记忆与衰老项目参与者佩戴了一条带有全身传感器的腰带,该传感器记录三个方向的加速度和角速度。我们使用从这些记录中得出的测量方法来量化五个子任务,包括:a)行走,b)从坐到站的转换,c)从站到坐的转换,d)转身,以及e)站立姿势。使用改良版的原始统一帕金森病评定量表(mUPDRS)评估帕金森步态和其他轻度帕金森体征。
在一系列针对年龄和性别进行调整的单独回归模型中,所有五个运动子任务测量方法均与帕金森步态相关,且占其方差的2%至32%。当在单个模型中考虑所有五个子任务测量方法时,向后排除法显示,行走、从坐到站以及转身的测量方法与帕金森步态存在独立关联,共同占其方差的35%以上。使用来自另一组258名老年人的数据进行交叉验证,结果相似。在类似分析中,只有行走与运动迟缓相关,摇摆与震颤相关。
定量运动子任务测量方法与老年人帕金森步态评分和其他帕金森体征的关联各不相同。量化运动的不同方面有可能促进临床特征描述,并有助于理解老年人运动能力受损的生物学基础。