Bishnoi Alka, Hu Yang, Hernandez Manuel E
Department of Physical Therapy, College of Health Professions and Human Services, Kean University, Union, NJ, United States.
Department of Kinesiology, San Jose State University, San Jose, CA, United States.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2024 Aug 22;16:1403185. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2024.1403185. eCollection 2024.
Perturbation walking (PW) has been shown to improve gait, however its effect on the cortical control of gait might provide insights on neural mechanisms underlying falls in adults with osteoarthritis. The objective of this study is to investigate the effect of PW on prefrontal cortical (PFC) activation in older women with (OA) and without osteoarthritis (HOA). We hypothesized that there would be an increase in PFC activation during PW relative to comfortable walking (CW) and higher increase in PFC activation during PW in HOA compared to OA.
Twenty community-dwelling older women (66.7 ± 5.41 years old) walked on an instrumented treadmill that provided perturbations at pseudo-random intervals between 5-25 s using a counterbalanced design. Functional Near Infrared Spectroscopy was used to quantify PFC oxygenated hemoglobin (HbO) and deoxyhemoglobin (Hb) levels, while standing prior to the task as a baseline. A linear mixed effects model was conducted to investigate the effects of cohort (HOA vs OA), task (PW vs CW), and their interaction on HbO (μM) and Hb (μM) levels.
HbO and Hb levels differed significantly between CW and PW tasks for both cohorts ( < 0.001) and demonstrated significant task by cohort interaction ( < 0.05). In addition, we found changes in walking performance (stride time, stride length, stride width and stance time) during and after PW. Spearman correlation demonstrated a strong association between increased stance time, increased body mass index and decreased PFC activation during PW. No other significant results were found.
This study found increase in PFC activation during PW and gait adaptation after a short bout of PW in HOA and OA. This increase in PFC activation was higher in HOA compared to OA, particularly during PW tasks, and was consistent with theory of limitations in mobility affecting neural activation in older adults. Further work remains to examine how pain, obesity, and mobility impacts cortical control in older adults with and without osteoarthritis.
已证实微扰行走(PW)可改善步态,然而其对步态皮质控制的影响可能为骨关节炎成年患者跌倒的神经机制提供见解。本研究的目的是调查PW对患有骨关节炎(OA)和未患骨关节炎(HOA)的老年女性前额叶皮质(PFC)激活的影响。我们假设,与舒适行走(CW)相比,PW期间PFC激活会增加,并且与OA相比,HOA在PW期间PFC激活的增加幅度更大。
20名社区居住的老年女性(66.7±5.41岁)在一台装有仪器的跑步机上行走,该跑步机采用平衡设计,以5 - 25秒的伪随机间隔提供微扰。在任务开始前站立时,使用功能近红外光谱法对PFC的氧合血红蛋白(HbO)和脱氧血红蛋白(Hb)水平进行量化,作为基线。采用线性混合效应模型来研究队列(HOA与OA)、任务(PW与CW)及其相互作用对HbO(微摩尔)和Hb(微摩尔)水平的影响。
两个队列在CW和PW任务之间,HbO和Hb水平均存在显著差异(<0.001),并且队列与任务的交互作用显著(<0.05)。此外,我们发现PW期间及之后行走性能(步幅时间、步幅长度、步幅宽度和站立时间)发生了变化。Spearman相关性表明,PW期间站立时间增加、体重指数增加与PFC激活减少之间存在强关联。未发现其他显著结果。
本研究发现,HOA和OA患者在PW期间PFC激活增加,且在短时间PW后步态适应性增强。与OA相比,HOA中PFC激活的这种增加更高,尤其是在PW任务期间,这与移动性受限影响老年人神经激活的理论一致。仍有待进一步研究疼痛、肥胖和移动性如何影响患有和未患骨关节炎的老年人的皮质控制。