Dual-Task Walking Capacity Mediates Tai Ji Impact on Physical and Cognitive Function
Li, Fuzhong1; Harmer, Peter2; Chou, Li-Shan3
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise: May 31, 2019 - Volume Publish Ahead of Print - Issue - p
doi: 10.1249/MSS.0000000000002051
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Purpose Emerging evidence indicates exercise training improves mobility and cognition and reduces falls in older adults, but underlying mechanisms are not well understood. This study tested the hypothesis that change in dual-task walking capacity mediates the positive effect of Tai Ji Quan and multimodal exercise on physical performance, activity confidence, global cognition, and falls among community-dwelling older adults at high risk of falling.
Methods We conducted a secondary analysis of a 6-month randomized clinical trial comparing Tai Ji Quan: Moving for Better Balance (TJQMBB) and multimodal exercise to stretching exercise in a sample of 670 older adults aged ≥70 years who had a history of falls or impaired mobility. Distal outcome measures, ascertained at a 12-month follow-up, were the Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB), Activities-Specific Balance Confidence (ABC), Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), and falls. The mediator hypothesized to account for the intervention effects was dual-task cost estimated by calculating changes in gait speed from single-task to dual-task walking from baseline to the end of intervention.
Results At 12 months, compared with stretching exercise, multimodal exercise significantly improved SPPB and ABC outcomes and reduced the number of falls (P < 0.05). However, it did not lower dual-task cost or mediate the intervention effects on distal outcomes. In contrast, TJQMBB significantly reduced dual-task cost relative to multimodal and stretching exercises (P < 0.05) which in turn resulted in improvements in lower-extremity physical performance, activity confidence, global cognitive function, and reductions in falls (P < 0.05) during follow-up.
Conclusion Enhanced dual-task walking capacity as a result of Tai Ji Quan training mediated improvements in physical and cognitive outcomes in older adults at high risk of falling.
© 2019 American College of Sports Medicine
Li, Fuzhong1; Harmer, Peter2; Chou, Li-Shan3
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise: May 31, 2019 - Volume Publish Ahead of Print - Issue - p
doi: 10.1249/MSS.0000000000002051
Original Investigation: PDF Only
BUY
PAP
Abstract
Author Information
Article Metrics
Purpose Emerging evidence indicates exercise training improves mobility and cognition and reduces falls in older adults, but underlying mechanisms are not well understood. This study tested the hypothesis that change in dual-task walking capacity mediates the positive effect of Tai Ji Quan and multimodal exercise on physical performance, activity confidence, global cognition, and falls among community-dwelling older adults at high risk of falling.
Methods We conducted a secondary analysis of a 6-month randomized clinical trial comparing Tai Ji Quan: Moving for Better Balance (TJQMBB) and multimodal exercise to stretching exercise in a sample of 670 older adults aged ≥70 years who had a history of falls or impaired mobility. Distal outcome measures, ascertained at a 12-month follow-up, were the Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB), Activities-Specific Balance Confidence (ABC), Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), and falls. The mediator hypothesized to account for the intervention effects was dual-task cost estimated by calculating changes in gait speed from single-task to dual-task walking from baseline to the end of intervention.
Results At 12 months, compared with stretching exercise, multimodal exercise significantly improved SPPB and ABC outcomes and reduced the number of falls (P < 0.05). However, it did not lower dual-task cost or mediate the intervention effects on distal outcomes. In contrast, TJQMBB significantly reduced dual-task cost relative to multimodal and stretching exercises (P < 0.05) which in turn resulted in improvements in lower-extremity physical performance, activity confidence, global cognitive function, and reductions in falls (P < 0.05) during follow-up.
Conclusion Enhanced dual-task walking capacity as a result of Tai Ji Quan training mediated improvements in physical and cognitive outcomes in older adults at high risk of falling.
© 2019 American College of Sports Medicine
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