Age modifies walking balance and neuromuscular control. Cognitive and postural constraints can increase walking balance difficulty and magnify age-related differences. However, how such challenges affect neuromuscular control remains unknown. We determined the effects of age, cognitive task, and arm position on neuromuscular control of walking balance. Young (YA) and older adults (OA) walked on a 6-cm wide beam with and without arm crossing and a cognitive task. Walking balance was quantified by the distance walked on the beam. We also computed step speed, margin of stability, and cognitive errors. Neuromuscular control was determined through muscle synergies extracted from 13 right leg and trunk muscles. We analyzed neuromuscular complexity by the number of synergies and the variance accounted for by the first synergy, coactivity by the number of significantly active muscles in each synergy, and efficiency by the sum of the activation of each significantly active muscle in each synergy. OA vs. YA walked a 14% shorter distance, made 12 times more cognitive errors, and showed less complex and efficient neuromuscular control. Cognitive task reduced walking balance mainly in OA. Decreases in step speed and margin of stability, along with increased muscle synergy coactivity and reduced efficiency were observed in both age groups. Arm-crossing also reduced walking balance mostly in OA, but step speed decreased mainly in YA, in whom the margin of stability increased. Arm-crossing reduced the complexity of synergies. Age, cognitive task, and arm position affect differently muscle synergy recruitment but have similar effects on walking balance.
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