Abstract

Background: Cognitive–motor interference (CMI) is measured by dual-tasking (DT), which involves motor and cognitive tasks. There is no consensus as to whether CMI is present in multiple sclerosis (MS).Objectives: We investigated the effects of 16 DT conditions by measuring motor complexity, cognitive domain, and task difficulty.Method: In total, 40 persons with MS (pwMSs) with Expanded Disease Status Scale (EDSS) 3.2 ± 1.7 and 31 age- and sex-matched healthy controls (HCs) completed 2 single walking, 8 single cognitive, and 2 complex walking tasks and 16 cognitive–motor DT. The main outcomes were mean values of gait velocity and the percentage change from single to DT (motor DT costs, mDTCs) and mean values of cognitive task accuracy and the percentage changes (cognitive DTC, cDTC).Results: Two-way analyses of variance showed the main effect of cognitive task yielded an F ratio of F(4, 268) = 72.35, p < 0.01, for mean gait velocity, and an F ratio of F(4, 304) = 17.12, p < 0.001, for mDTC, indicating that the mean velocity was significantly lower and the mDTC significantly higher for DS_B (mean = 1.27, SD = 0.03, and mean = 13.52, SD = 1.28, respectively). The main effect of cognitive task yielded an F ratio of F(4, 116) = 84.32, p < 0.001, with the lowest average accuracy for DS_B (mean = 43.95, SD = 3.33); no effect was found for cDTC. In pwMSs, the EDSS accounted for 28% (F = 13.65, p = 0.001) of variance in a model predicting the highest mDTC.Conclusions: Overall, among different cognitive tasks added, the Digit Span backward was the most interfering cognitive task over gait velocity and accuracy. The effect was similar independently from the motor complexity and the group. PwMSs and HCs behaved in a similar manner at all motor complexity levels and during all cognitive task.

Highlights

  • Gait is a conscious, goal-oriented process, which requires higher-level cognitive functions, such as executive functioning, attention, memory, and vision [1]

  • Simultaneous performance of a cognitive and a motor task may lead to a percentage change in one or both tasks [1], and it is usually quantified as DT cost (DTC), which is the percentage change from the single-task (ST) to the DT performance [2]

  • Forty Persons with multiple sclerosis (pwMSs) and 31 age-matched healthy controls (HCs) participated in the study

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Summary

Introduction

Goal-oriented process, which requires higher-level cognitive functions, such as executive functioning, attention, memory, and vision [1]. The simultaneous performance of a cognitive task during walking may worsen or unmask gait impairments, known as called cognitive–motor interference (CMI). Simultaneous performance of a cognitive and a motor task may lead to a percentage change in one or both tasks [1], and it is usually quantified as DT cost (DTC), which is the percentage change from the single-task (ST) to the DT performance [2]. This DTC can be in positive or negative direction, indicating a detrimental or a facilitating effect on a given task, respectively. There is no consensus as to whether CMI is present in multiple sclerosis (MS)

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