Gait and Posture Biomechanics Laboratory, School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Washington State University, Pullman, WA, 99164-2920, USA.
Gait and Posture Biomechanics Laboratory, Department of Kinesiology and Educational Psychology, Washington State University, Pullman, WA, 99164-1410, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 2024 Feb;242(2):505-519. doi: 10.1007/s00221-023-06772-w. Epub 2024 Jan 10.
Understanding why falls during pregnancy occur at over 25% rate over gestation has clinical impacts on the health of pregnant individuals. Attention, proprioception, and perception of the environment are required to prevent trips and falls. This research aimed to understand how the changes to these neurocognitive processes control obstacle avoidance through gestation. Seventeen pregnant participants were tested five times in 6-week intervals. Participants walked an obstacle course (OC), and we analyzed the crossings over obstacles that were set to 10% of participants' body height. Participants also performed an attentional network test (ANT: performance of specific components of attention), an obstacle perception task (OP: ability to visually define an obstacle and translate that to a body posture), and a joint position sense task (JPS: ability to recognize and recreate a joint position from somatosensation). In the OC task, average leading and trailing foot crossing heights significantly reduced by 13% and 23% respectively, with no change in variation, between weeks 13 and 31 of pregnancy, indicating an increased risk of obstacle contact during this time. The variability in minimum leading foot distances from the obstacle was correlated with all three neurocognition tasks (ANT, OP, and JPS). Increased fall rates in the second and third trimesters of pregnancy may be driven by changes in attention, with additional contributions of joint position sense and environmental perception at various stages of gestation. The results imply that a holistic examination on an individual basis may be required to determine individual trip risk and appropriate safety modifications.
了解为什么孕妇在妊娠期间摔倒的发生率超过 25%,这对孕妇的健康有临床影响。为了防止绊倒,需要注意、本体感觉和对环境的感知。本研究旨在了解这些神经认知过程的变化如何在妊娠期间控制对障碍物的回避。17 名孕妇在 6 周间隔内接受了 5 次测试。参与者走障碍课程 (OC),我们分析了设置为参与者身高 10%的障碍物跨越。参与者还进行了注意力网络测试 (ANT: 注意力特定成分的表现)、障碍物感知任务 (OP: 视觉定义障碍物并将其转换为身体姿势的能力) 和关节位置感知任务 (JPS: 从体感识别和重建关节位置的能力)。在 OC 任务中,平均领先和尾随脚的跨越高度分别显著降低了 13%和 23%,而在妊娠 13 周到 31 周之间,变化没有变化,表明在此期间接触障碍物的风险增加。最小领先脚与障碍物的距离变化与所有三个神经认知任务 (ANT、OP 和 JPS) 相关。妊娠第二和第三个三个月的跌倒率增加可能是由注意力变化引起的,在妊娠的各个阶段,关节位置感觉和环境感知也有额外的贡献。结果表明,可能需要对个体进行全面检查,以确定个体的绊倒风险和适当的安全修改。