Assessing acute effects of two motor-cognitive training modalities on cognitive functions, postural control, and gait stability in older adults: a randomized crossover study. Li R, et al, PeerJ 2024.
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Résumé et points clés
Background: The process of aging often accompanies a decline in cognitive function, postural control, and gait stability, consequently increasing the susceptibility to falls among older individuals. In response to these challenges, motor-cognitive training has emerged as a potential intervention to mitigate age-related declines.
Objective: This study aims to assess the acute effects of two distinct motor-cognitive training modalities, treadmill dual-task training (TMDT) and interactive motor-cognitive training (IMCT), on cognitive function, postural control, walking ability, and dual-task performance in the elderly population.
Method: In this randomized crossover study, 35 healthy elderly individuals (aged 60-75) participated in three acute training sessions involving TMDT, IMCT, and a control reading condition. Assessments of executive function, postural control, gait performance, and cognitive accuracy were conducted both before and after each session.
Results: Both TMDT and IMCT improved executive functions. Notably, IMCT resulted in a significant enhancement in correct response rates and a reduction in reaction times in the Stroop task (p < 0.05) compared to TMDT and the control condition. IMCT also led to an increase in dual-task gait speed (p < 0.001) and showed a trend towards improved cognitive accuracy (p = 0.07). Conversely, TMDT increased postural sway with eyes open (p = 0.013), indicating a potential detriment to postural control.
Conclusion: The findings suggest that IMCT holds greater immediate efficacy in enhancing cognitive function and gait stability among older adults compared to TMDT, with a lesser adverse impact on postural control. This underscores the potential of IMCT as a preferred approach for mitigating fall risk and enhancing both cognitive and physical functions in the elderly population.
Références de l'article
- Assessing acute effects of two motor-cognitive training modalities on cognitive functions, postural control, and gait stability in older adults: a randomized crossover study.
- Assessing acute effects of two motor-cognitive training modalities on cognitive functions, postural control, and gait stability in older adults: a randomized crossover study.
- Li R, Qu P, Hu X, Li X, Zeng H, Gao B, Sun Z
- PeerJ
- 2024
- PeerJ. 2024 Oct 21;12:e18306. doi: 10.7717/peerj.18306. eCollection 2024.
- Humans, *Cross-Over Studies, Aged, *Postural Balance/physiology, Male, Female, *Cognition/physiology, Middle Aged, *Gait/physiology, Executive Function/physiology, Accidental Falls/prevention & control, Cognitive Training
- Syndromes_Geriatriques, Chute
- Liens
- Traduction automatique en Français sur Google Translate
- DOI: 10.7717/peerj.18306
- PMID: 39465165
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