Department of Applied Physiology and Kinesiology, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, United States.
Neuroscience and Behavior Program, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts, United States.
J Neurophysiol. 2023 Dec 1;130(6):1508-1520. doi: 10.1152/jn.00078.2023. Epub 2023 Nov 8.
Corticospinal drive during walking is reduced in older adults compared with young adults, but it is not clear how this decrease might compromise one's ability to adjust stepping, particularly during visuomotor adaptation. We hypothesize that age-related changes in corticospinal drive could predict differences in older adults' step length and step time adjustments in response to visual perturbations compared with younger adults. Healthy young ( = 21; age 18-33 yr) and older adults ( = 20; age 68-80 yr) were tested with a treadmill task, incorporating visual feedback of the foot position and stepping targets in real-time. During adaptation, the visuomotor gain was reduced on one side, causing the foot cursor and step targets to move slower on that side of the screen (i.e., split-visuomotor adaptation). Corticospinal drive was quantified by coherence between electromyographic signals in the beta-gamma frequency band (15-45 Hz). The results showed that ) older adults adapted to visuomotor perturbations during walking, with a similar reduction in error asymmetry compared with younger adults; ) however, older adults showed reduced adaptation in step time symmetry, despite demonstrating similar adaptation in step length asymmetry compared with younger adults; and ) smaller overall changes in step time asymmetry was associated with reduced corticospinal drive to the tibialis anterior in the slow leg during split-visuomotor adaptation. These findings suggest that changes in corticospinal drive may affect older adults' control of step timing in response to visual challenges. This could be important for safe navigation when walking in different environments or dealing with unexpected circumstances. Corticospinal input is essential for visually guided walking, especially when the walking pattern must be modified to accurately step on safe locations. Age-related changes in corticospinal drive are associated with inflexible step time, which necessitates different locomotor adaptation strategies in older adults.
在行走过程中,与年轻人相比,老年人的皮质脊髓驱动会减少,但目前尚不清楚这种减少如何影响一个人调整步伐的能力,尤其是在视动适应期间。我们假设,皮质脊髓驱动的年龄相关变化可能预测老年人在响应视觉干扰时与年轻人相比,其步长和步时调整的差异。本研究招募了 21 名健康的年轻人(年龄 18-33 岁)和 20 名健康的老年人(年龄 68-80 岁),通过在跑步机上进行测试,实时反馈脚部位置和踏足目标的视觉反馈。在适应期间,一侧的视动增益降低,导致脚部光标和踏足目标在屏幕的该侧移动较慢(即,分裂视动适应)。皮质脊髓驱动通过肌电图信号在β-γ频带(15-45 Hz)中的相干性进行量化。结果表明:i)老年人在行走过程中适应视动干扰,与年轻人相比,错误不对称性的降低幅度相似;ii)然而,与年轻人相比,老年人在步时对称性方面的适应程度降低,尽管在步长不对称性方面的适应程度相似;iii)步时对称性的总体变化较小与在分裂视动适应期间,慢侧胫骨前肌的皮质脊髓驱动减少相关。这些发现表明,皮质脊髓驱动的变化可能会影响老年人对视觉挑战的步时控制。这对于在不同环境中行走或应对意外情况时的安全导航可能很重要。皮质脊髓输入对于视觉引导的行走至关重要,尤其是在必须修改行走模式以准确踏足安全位置时。皮质脊髓驱动的年龄相关变化与僵硬的步时有关,这需要老年人采用不同的运动适应策略。