Wayne Peter M, Hausdorff Jeffrey M, Lough Matthew, Gow Brian J, Lipsitz Lewis, Novak Vera, Macklin Eric A, Peng Chung-Kang, Manor Brad
Division of Preventive Medicine, Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital , Boston, MA , USA ; Harvard Medical School , Boston, MA , USA.
Department of Neurology, Center for the Study of Movement, Cognition, and Mobility, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Tel Aviv University , Tel Aviv , Israel.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2015 Jun 9;9:332. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00332. eCollection 2015.
Tai Chi (TC) exercise improves balance and reduces falls in older, health-impaired adults. TC's impact on dual task (DT) gait parameters predictive of falls, especially in healthy active older adults, however, is unknown.
To compare differences in usual and DT gait between long-term TC-expert practitioners and age-/gender-matched TC-naïve adults, and to determine the effects of short-term TC training on gait in healthy, non-sedentary older adults.
A cross-sectional study compared gait in healthy TC-naïve and TC-expert (24.5 ± 12 years experience) older adults. TC-naïve adults then completed a 6-month, two-arm, wait-list randomized clinical trial of TC training. Gait speed and stride time variability (Coefficient of Variation %) were assessed during 90 s trials of undisturbed and cognitive DT (serial subtractions) conditions.
During DT, gait speed decreased (p < 0.003) and stride time variability increased (p < 0.004) in all groups. Cross-sectional comparisons indicated that stride time variability was lower in the TC-expert vs. TC-naïve group, significantly so during DT (2.11 vs. 2.55%; p = 0.027); by contrast, gait speed during both undisturbed and DT conditions did not differ between groups. Longitudinal analyses of TC-naïve adults randomized to 6 months of TC training or usual care identified improvement in DT gait speed in both groups. A small improvement in DT stride time variability (effect size = 0.2) was estimated with TC training, but no significant differences between groups were observed. Potentially important improvements after TC training could not be excluded in this small study.
In healthy active older adults, positive effects of short- and long-term TC were observed only under cognitively challenging DT conditions and only for stride time variability. DT stride time variability offers a potentially sensitive metric for monitoring TC's impact on fall risk with healthy older adults.
太极拳(TC)运动可改善健康状况不佳的老年人的平衡能力并减少跌倒。然而,太极拳对预测跌倒的双重任务(DT)步态参数的影响尚不清楚,尤其是在健康活跃的老年人中。
比较长期太极拳专家与年龄和性别匹配的未接触过太极拳的成年人在常规和双重任务步态方面的差异,并确定短期太极拳训练对健康、非久坐的老年人步态的影响。
一项横断面研究比较了健康的未接触过太极拳的老年人和太极拳专家(有24.5±12年经验)的步态。未接触过太极拳的成年人随后完成了一项为期6个月的双臂、等待名单随机临床试验,试验内容为太极拳训练。在90秒的无干扰和认知双重任务(连续减法)条件试验中评估步态速度和步幅时间变异性(变异系数%)。
在双重任务期间,所有组的步态速度均下降(p<0.003),步幅时间变异性增加(p<0.004)。横断面比较表明,太极拳专家组的步幅时间变异性低于未接触过太极拳的组,在双重任务期间差异显著(2.11%对2.55%;p=0.027);相比之下,两组在无干扰和双重任务条件下的步态速度没有差异。对随机分配接受6个月太极拳训练或常规护理的未接触过太极拳的成年人进行纵向分析,发现两组的双重任务步态速度均有改善。估计太极拳训练使双重任务步幅时间变异性有小幅改善(效应大小=0.2),但两组之间未观察到显著差异。在这项小型研究中不能排除太极拳训练后可能出现的重要改善。
在健康活跃的老年人中,仅在认知挑战性双重任务条件下观察到短期和长期太极拳训练的积极效果,且仅针对步幅时间变异性。双重任务步幅时间变异性为监测太极拳对健康老年人跌倒风险的影响提供了一个潜在的敏感指标。