Roytman Stiven, Paalanen Rebecca, Carli Giulia, Marusic Uros, Kanel Prabesh, van Laar Teus, Bohnen Nico I
Department of Radiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Department of Neurology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Neural Regen Res. 2025 Jan 1;20(1):82-92. doi: 10.4103/NRR.NRR-D-23-01484. Epub 2024 Mar 1.
Understanding the neural underpinning of human gait and balance is one of the most pertinent challenges for 21st-century translational neuroscience due to the profound impact that falls and mobility disturbances have on our aging population. Posture and gait control does not happen automatically, as previously believed, but rather requires continuous involvement of central nervous mechanisms. To effectively exert control over the body, the brain must integrate multiple streams of sensory information, including visual, vestibular, and somatosensory signals. The mechanisms which underpin the integration of these multisensory signals are the principal topic of the present work. Existing multisensory integration theories focus on how failure of cognitive processes thought to be involved in multisensory integration leads to falls in older adults. Insufficient emphasis, however, has been placed on specific contributions of individual sensory modalities to multisensory integration processes and cross-modal interactions that occur between the sensory modalities in relation to gait and balance. In the present work, we review the contributions of somatosensory, visual, and vestibular modalities, along with their multisensory intersections to gait and balance in older adults and patients with Parkinson's disease. We also review evidence of vestibular contributions to multisensory temporal binding windows, previously shown to be highly pertinent to fall risk in older adults. Lastly, we relate multisensory vestibular mechanisms to potential neural substrates, both at the level of neurobiology (concerning positron emission tomography imaging) and at the level of electrophysiology (concerning electroencephalography). We hope that this integrative review, drawing influence across multiple subdisciplines of neuroscience, paves the way for novel research directions and therapeutic neuromodulatory approaches, to improve the lives of older adults and patients with neurodegenerative diseases.
了解人类步态和平衡的神经基础是21世纪转化神经科学最相关的挑战之一,因为跌倒和行动障碍对老年人群有深远影响。姿势和步态控制并非如之前所认为的那样自动发生,而是需要中枢神经机制的持续参与。为了有效控制身体,大脑必须整合多种感觉信息流,包括视觉、前庭和躯体感觉信号。这些多感觉信号整合的机制是本研究的主要主题。现有的多感觉整合理论关注那些被认为参与多感觉整合的认知过程的失败如何导致老年人跌倒。然而,对于个体感觉模态对多感觉整合过程的具体贡献以及在步态和平衡方面感觉模态之间发生的跨模态相互作用,关注还不够。在本研究中,我们回顾了躯体感觉、视觉和前庭模态的贡献,以及它们在老年人和帕金森病患者的步态和平衡方面的多感觉交叉。我们还回顾了前庭对多感觉时间绑定窗口的贡献的证据,此前已表明这与老年人的跌倒风险高度相关。最后,我们将多感觉前庭机制与潜在的神经基质联系起来,包括神经生物学层面(关于正电子发射断层扫描成像)和电生理学层面(关于脑电图)。我们希望这篇综合综述,借鉴神经科学多个子学科的研究成果,为新的研究方向和治疗性神经调节方法铺平道路,以改善老年人和神经退行性疾病患者的生活。