Faculty of Health & Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario; Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario; School of Physical Therapy, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario.
Faculty of Health & Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario; School of Physical Therapy, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2019 Nov;100(11):2129-2135. doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2019.05.030. Epub 2019 Jun 25.
To assess (1) the effect of task (single and dual task), time (discharge and 4mo), and their interaction for mobility; (2) task prioritization during dual-task testing; and (3) the association between cognition on change in mobility between discharge from rehabilitation and 4 months' follow-up.
Prospective cohort study.
Rehabilitation hospital.
People with lower extremity amputations (N=22) were consecutively recruited at discharge from an inpatient prosthetic rehabilitation program.
Not applicable.
Gait velocity and the L Test of Functional Mobility, single and dual task (serial subtractions by 3), were the primary outcomes. Montreal Cognitive Assessment and Trail Making Test quantified cognition as secondary outcomes. Repeated measures analysis of variance evaluated the effects of task (single task and dual task) and time (at discharge and 4 months' follow-up) and their interaction on each outcome. A performance-resource operating characteristic graph evaluated gait and cognitive task prioritization. Multivariable linear regression evaluated the association between cognition and change in mobility over time.
No significant interactions between task and time were found (all P>.121) for L Test and gait velocity. The L Test single task (P=.001) and dual task (P=.004) improved over time. Gait velocity improved over time for both single task and dual task (P<.001). Dual-task performance was slower than single-task performances at each time point. The Trail Making Test B was independently associated with the change in dual-task L Test (P=.012), and single-task (P=.003) and dual-task (P=.006) gait velocity at follow-up.
Gait velocity and L Test single and dual task improved over time. No significant interactions indicated that cognitive task did not differentially affect performance over time. Lower executive function scores at discharge were independently associated with lower gains in all gait velocity and dual-task L Test outcomes at follow-up.
评估(1)任务(单任务和双任务)、时间(出院时和 4 个月时)及其相互作用对移动能力的影响;(2)在双任务测试中任务的优先级;(3)认知功能与从康复出院到 4 个月随访期间移动能力变化之间的关系。
前瞻性队列研究。
康复医院。
下肢截肢者(N=22)连续招募自住院假肢康复计划出院。
不适用。
步态速度和 L 功能性移动测试,单任务和双任务(连续 3 次减法)是主要结果。蒙特利尔认知评估和连线测试作为次要结果量化认知功能。重复测量方差分析评估任务(单任务和双任务)和时间(出院时和 4 个月随访时)及其相互作用对每个结果的影响。性能资源操作特征图评估步态和认知任务优先级。多元线性回归评估认知与随时间变化的移动能力之间的关系。
在 L 测试和步态速度方面,任务和时间之间没有发现显著的相互作用(均 P>.121)。L 测试单任务(P=.001)和双任务(P=.004)随时间改善。步态速度在单任务和双任务时均随时间改善(均 P<.001)。在每个时间点,双任务表现均比单任务表现慢。Trail Making Test B 与双任务 L 测试(P=.012)、单任务(P=.003)和双任务(P=.006)步态速度的随访变化独立相关。
步态速度和 L 测试单任务和双任务随时间改善。没有显著的相互作用表明认知任务不会随时间对性能产生不同的影响。出院时的执行功能评分较低与随访时所有步态速度和双任务 L 测试结果的改善程度较低独立相关。