Abstract

BackgroundDual-task (DT) walking has increasingly been investigated over the last decade because of its valuable role as a clinical marker of both cognitive impairment and fall risk in older adults based on cognitive and motor performance (DTEcog, DTEmotor). However, there is still a lack of information on what type of dual task to choose and which is the most adapted to the population of interest. Research questionTo evaluate the effect of different dual-tasks (DT3, DT7, FLU, STROOP) on the spatiotemporal and kinematic parameters of hip, knee, and ankle joints. MethodsThirty-eight older adults were recruited (9 men, 29 women, mean age = 77.5 +/- 6.5 years, mean height = 163.6 +/- 8.6 cm, mean weight = 67.5 +/- 15.3 kg). They performed a single and dual-task walk with the 4 types of tasks during 1 min, equipped with an inertial system. Dual-task effect (DTE) on spatiotemporal and kinematic variables as well as cognitive score and speed were calculated. ResultsAn alteration in most of the spatiotemporal parameters was observed in each DT condition (p < 0.05), especially in arithmetic tasks (DT3, DT7), while no DT effect was noticed on kinematic parameters (RMSE<3°) except on hip and knee angular velocities (RMSE>15°). Arithmetic tasks seemed to alter more spatiotemporal and kinematic parameters than the verbal fluency or STROOP test. However, DT7 appeared to be too difficult for the population of interest. SignificanceArithmetic tasks seemed to be very pertinent as a clinical dual-task protocol for older adults. The use of an inertial system to retrieve kinematic variables is an improvement in these dual-task protocols.

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