School of Human Kinetics, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa, 125 University Private, Ottawa, ON, K1N 6N5, Canada.
Interdisciplinary School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa, 25 University Private, Ottawa, ON, K1N 7K4, Canada.
J Neurol. 2022 May;269(5):2378-2402. doi: 10.1007/s00415-021-10944-5. Epub 2022 Jan 6.
People with central neurological disorders experience difficulties with dual-task walking due to disease-related impairments. The objective of this review was to provide a comprehensive examination of the neural correlates (structural/functional brain changes) of dual-task walking in people with Parkinson's disease (PD), multiple sclerosis (MS), stroke, and Alzheimer's disease (AD).
A systematic review of the literature was conducted, following PRISMA guidelines, on Medline, Embase, and Scopus. Included studies examined the relationship between structural and functional brain imaging and dual-task walking performance in people with PD, MS, stroke, and AD. Articles that met the inclusion criteria had baseline characteristics, study design, and behavioral and brain outcomes extracted. Twenty-three studies were included in this review.
Most structural imaging studies (75%) found an association between decreased brain integrity and poor dual-task performance. Specific brain regions that showed this association include the striatum regions and hippocampus in PD and supplementary motor area in MS. Functional imaging studies reported an association between increased prefrontal activity and maintained (compensatory recruitment) or decreased dual-task walking performance in PD and stroke. A subset (n = 2) of the stroke papers found no significant correlations. Increased supplementary motor area activity was associated with decreased performance in MS and stroke. No studies on AD were identified.
In people with PD, MS, and stroke, several neural correlates of dual-task walking have been identified, however, the direction of the association between neural and performance outcomes varied across the studies. The type of cognitive task used and presentation modality (e.g., visual) may have contributed to these mixed findings.
中枢神经系统障碍患者由于与疾病相关的损伤而在双重任务行走时会遇到困难。本综述的目的是全面检查帕金森病(PD)、多发性硬化症(MS)、中风和阿尔茨海默病(AD)患者双重任务行走的神经相关性(结构/功能大脑变化)。
按照 PRISMA 指南,对 Medline、Embase 和 Scopus 进行了系统的文献回顾。纳入的研究检查了 PD、MS、中风和 AD 患者的结构和功能大脑成像与双重任务行走表现之间的关系。符合纳入标准的文章提取了基线特征、研究设计以及行为和大脑结果。本综述共纳入 23 项研究。
大多数结构影像学研究(75%)发现大脑完整性下降与双重任务表现不佳之间存在关联。显示这种关联的特定大脑区域包括 PD 的纹状体区域和海马体以及 MS 的辅助运动区。功能影像学研究报告称,PD 和中风患者前额叶活动增加与维持(代偿性招募)或降低双重任务行走表现之间存在关联。少数(n=2)中风论文未发现显著相关性。MS 和中风患者的辅助运动区活动增加与表现下降有关。未发现 AD 的研究。
在 PD、MS 和中风患者中,已经确定了一些双重任务行走的神经相关性,但神经和表现结果之间的关联方向在研究中有所不同。所使用的认知任务类型和呈现方式(例如,视觉)可能导致了这些混杂的发现。