Abstract

The cortical control of gait and mobility involves multiple brain regions. Therefore, one could speculate that the association between specific spatial patterns of cortical thickness may be differentially associated with different mobility domains. To test this possibility, 115 healthy participants aged 27–82 (mean 60.5 ± 13.8) underwent a mobility assessment (usual-walk, dual-task walk, Timed Up and Go) and MRI scan. Ten mobility domains of relatively simple (e.g., usual-walking) and complex tasks (i.e., dual task walking, turns, transitions) and cortical thickness of 68 ROIs were extracted. All associations between mobility and cortical thickness were controlled for age and gender. Scaled Subprofile Modelling (SSM), a PCA-regression, identified thickness patterns that were correlated with the individual mobility domains, controlling for multiple comparisons. We found that lower mean global cortical thickness was correlated with worse general mobility (r = − 0.296, p = 0.003), as measured by the time to complete the Timed Up and Go test. Three distinct patterns of cortical thickness were associated with three different gait domains during simple, usual-walking: pace, rhythm, and symmetry. In contrast, cortical thickness patterns were not related to the more complex mobility domains. These findings demonstrate that robust and topographically distinct cortical thickness patterns are linked to select mobility domains during relatively simple walking, but not to more complex aspects of mobility. Functional connectivity may play a larger role in the more complex aspects of mobility.

Highlights

  • The cortical control of gait and mobility involves multiple brain regions

  • We evaluated the relationship between spatial patterns in cortical thickness and mobility measured in multiple domains

  • Our novel approach revealed that three distinct patterns of cortical thickness were associated with three different gait domains during simple, single-task usual-walking: pace, rhythm, and symmetry

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Summary

Introduction

The cortical control of gait and mobility involves multiple brain regions. one could speculate that the association between specific spatial patterns of cortical thickness may be differentially associated with different mobility domains. Prospective clinical studies have shown that changes in some of these specific gait domains are associated with the development of disparate outcomes (e.g., Alzheimer’s disease, mild cognitive impairment, Parkinsonism, and death)[1,2,6,7,8] These gait domains were used to provide a framework for investigating and interpreting findings related to the neural correlates of gait c­ ontrol[9,10]. In this study, we use a different whole brain analysis approach that measures cortical thickness across the entire cerebrum This approach may reveal specific patterns of gray matter loss that correlate to particular gait domains

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