• J. Gerontol. A Biol. Sci. Med. Sci. · Oct 2010

    Executive function, memory, and gait speed decline in well-functioning older adults.

    • N L Watson, C Rosano, R M Boudreau, E M Simonsick, L Ferrucci, K Sutton-Tyrrell, S E Hardy, H H Atkinson, K Yaffe, S Satterfield, T B Harris, A B Newman, and Health ABC Study.
    • Department of Epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3545, USA. watsonn@edc.pitt.edu
    • J. Gerontol. A Biol. Sci. Med. Sci. 2010 Oct 1;65(10):1093-100.

    BackgroundIn community-dwelling older adults, global cognitive function predicts longitudinal gait speed decline. Few prospective studies have evaluated whether specific executive cognitive deficits in aging may account for gait slowing over time.MethodsMultiple cognitive tasks were administered at baseline in 909 participants in the Health, Aging, and Body Composition Study Cognitive Vitality Substudy (mean age 75.2 ± 2.8 years, 50.6% women, 48.4% black). Usual gait speed (m/s) over 20 minutes was assessed at baseline and over a 5-year follow-up.ResultsPoorer performance in each cognitive task was cross-sectionally associated with slower gait independent of demographic and health characteristics. In longitudinal analyses, each 1 SD poorer performance in global function, verbal memory, and executive function was associated with 0.003-0.004 m/s greater gait speed decline per year (p =.03-.05) after adjustment for baseline gait speed, demographic, and health characteristics.ConclusionsIn this well-functioning cohort, several cognitive tasks were associated with gait speed cross-sectionally and predicted longitudinal gait speed decline. These data are consistent with a shared pathology underlying cognitive and motor declines but do not suggest that specific executive cognitive deficits account for slowing of usual gait in aging.

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