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Motor imagery does not effectively improve walking-related performance in older adults: A randomised controlled trial - 23/10/24

Doi : 10.1016/j.rehab.2024.101899 
Vaughan Nicholson, PhD 1, , Michael Steele, PhD 1, Peter Wilson, PhD 2
1 School of Allied Health, Australian Catholic University, 1100 Nudgee Road, Banyo, QLD, 4055, Australia 
2 Healthy Brain & Mind Research Centre (HBM), School of Behavioural and Health Sciences, Australian Catholic University, 115 Victoria Parade, Fitzroy, VIC, 3065 Australia 

Corresponding author
Sous presse. Manuscrit accepté. Disponible en ligne depuis le Wednesday 23 October 2024

Highlights

Motor imagery training did not improve walking-related performance in older adults
Motor imagery training improved the clarity of non-walking imagined tasks
Physical and imagined walking performance were associated with executive function
Motor imagery accuracy was not associated with executive function

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Abstract

Background

Inaccurate perception of one's physical abilities is potentially related to age-related declines in motor planning and can lead to changes in walking. Motor imagery training is effective at improving balance and walking in older adults, but most research has been conducted on older adults following surgery or in those with a history of falls. Deficits in motor imagery ability are associated with reduced executive function in older adults with cognitive impairment.

Objectives

To determine whether walking-specific motor imagery training could improve walking performance (physical and imagined) in healthy older adults, and identify the relationship between actual and imagined movement, motor imagery accuracy and executive function across 5 different walking tasks in healthy older adults.

Methods

A cohort of 53 community dwelling older adults took part in a 4-week randomized controlled trial to assess the effect of motor imagery training on the physical and imagined performance of 5 walking-related tasks (3 narrow path walking tasks, Timed-up and go and step-over test), together with motor imagery clarity using the kinesthetic and visual imagery questionnaire (KVIQ-10). The association between physical performance, motor imagery accuracy and executive function were identified at baseline.

Results

Four weeks of motor imagery training did not improve walking-specific performance (imagined or physical) compared to no-training. Motor imagery training did improve the visual clarity of imagined non-walking tasks. Executive function was significantly correlated with 2 out of 5 imagined walking tasks and 4 out of 5 physical walking tasks but was not associated with motor imagery accuracy.

Conclusion

Four weeks of motor imagery training is not effective at improving performance in walking-related tasks in healthy older adults. This lack of improvement may be due in part to the high functional ability of the cohort. Future research should assess the relationship between motor planning and executive function with more complex walking tasks.

Trial registration

ANZCTR registration (ACTRN12619001784101)

Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.

Keywords : Gait, Motor Planning, Executive Function, Motor Control, Cognitive Aging

List of abbreviations : ABC-6, KVIQ-10, KVIQ-V, RAPA, RCT, SOT, TMT, TMT-A, TMT-B, TUG


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© 2024  Publié par Elsevier Masson SAS.
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