The Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, USA.
J Physiol. 2018 Apr 1;596(7):1199-1210. doi: 10.1113/JP275166. Epub 2018 Mar 2.
Although the natural decline in walking performance with ageing affects the quality of life of a growing elderly population, its physiological origins remain unknown. By using predictive neuromechanical simulations of human walking with age-related neuro-musculo-skeletal changes, we find evidence that the loss of muscle strength and muscle contraction speed dominantly contribute to the reduced walking economy and speed. The findings imply that focusing on recovering these muscular changes may be the only effective way to improve performance in elderly walking. More generally, the work is of interest for investigating the physiological causes of altered gait due to age, injury and disorders.
Healthy elderly people walk slower and energetically less efficiently than young adults. This decline in walking performance lowers the quality of life for a growing ageing population, and understanding its physiological origin is critical for devising interventions that can delay or revert it. However, the origin of the decline in walking performance remains unknown, as ageing produces a range of physiological changes whose individual effects on gait are difficult to separate in experiments with human subjects. Here we use a predictive neuromechanical model to separately address the effects of common age-related changes to the skeletal, muscular and nervous systems. We find in computer simulations of this model that the combined changes produce gait consistent with elderly walking and that mainly the loss of muscle strength and mass reduces energy efficiency. In addition, we find that the slower preferred walking speed of elderly people emerges in the simulations when adapting to muscle fatigue, again mainly caused by muscle-related changes. The results suggest that a focus on recovering these muscular changes may be the only effective way to improve performance in elderly walking.
尽管随着年龄的增长,步行能力的自然下降会影响到越来越多的老年人群的生活质量,但其生理起源仍不清楚。通过对与年龄相关的神经肌肉骨骼变化相关的人类行走进行预测性神经力学模拟,我们发现证据表明,肌肉力量和肌肉收缩速度的丧失主要导致行走经济性和速度降低。研究结果表明,关注恢复这些肌肉变化可能是改善老年人行走能力的唯一有效方法。更一般地说,这项工作对于研究由于年龄、损伤和疾病而改变步态的生理原因具有重要意义。
健康的老年人比年轻人行走速度慢且能量效率低。这种步行能力的下降降低了日益增长的老年人口的生活质量,了解其生理起源对于设计可以延缓或逆转这种下降的干预措施至关重要。然而,步行能力下降的原因仍然未知,因为衰老会产生一系列生理变化,其对步态的个别影响在人体实验中很难分离。在这里,我们使用一种预测性神经力学模型来分别研究骨骼、肌肉和神经系统的常见与年龄相关的变化的影响。我们在该模型的计算机模拟中发现,这些综合变化产生了与老年人行走一致的步态,并且主要是肌肉力量和质量的丧失降低了能量效率。此外,我们发现老年人更喜欢的较慢行走速度是在模拟适应肌肉疲劳时出现的,这主要也是由肌肉相关变化引起的。研究结果表明,关注恢复这些肌肉变化可能是改善老年人行走能力的唯一有效方法。