Relationship of Multiple Sensory Impairments With Physical Performance in Older Adults in the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging.

Atalie C Thompson, Tyler Mansfield, Eileen Johnson, Peggy M Cawthon, Elsa S Strotmeyer, Jeff D Williamson, Steve Cummings, Theresa Mau, Stephen B Kritchevsky
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Abstract

Background: Sensory and cognitive function can impact physical performance, but the relationship of multiple sensory impairments (SIs) with mobility in older adults is not well understood. We hypothesized that severity and number of SIs would be associated with worse timed physical mobility performance, and that cognitive processing speed would mediate the association.

Methods: Participants (N = 832) were older adults (mean age 76.3 ± 5.0 years; 59.4% women; 84.2% non-Hispanic White) who completed tests of physical performance, cognitive function, and multiple sensory domains. Separate linear regression models examined the association of SI with 400-m walk, expanded Short Physical Performance Battery (eSPPB), 4-square step test (FSST), and stair climb test. Cognitive measures of executive function/processing speed (Digit Symbol Coding [DSC] and Trail Making Test [Trails] B) were tested as potential mediators of the relationship between SI and physical performance.

Results: Each 1-point decrement in SI scale was associated with slower 400-m walking speed (β = -0.01 m/s, p = .03), lower eSPPB score (β = -0.05 points, p < .001), and longer FSST time (β = 0.20 seconds, p = .01), but there was no association with stair climb time. Using a causal mediation approach with DSC and Trails B as potential mediators, 47.9% of the association of SI with 400-m walk, 43.8% of the association of SI with eSPPB, and 56.7% of the association of multiple SI with FSST were mediated.

Conclusions: Greater SIs were associated with worse physical performance in older adults, and the association was partially mediated by measures of cognitive processing speed and executive function. Future studies should investigate the temporal relationship between SIs, cognitive function, and physical function.

肌肉、活动能力和老龄化研究中老年人多种感官障碍与身体表现的关系。
背景:感觉和认知功能可以影响身体机能,但老年人多重感觉障碍(SI)与活动能力的关系尚不清楚。我们假设si的严重程度和数量与较差的定时身体活动能力有关,而认知处理速度将介导这种关联。方法:参与者(N=832)为老年人(平均年龄76.3+/-5.0岁;59.4%的女性;84.2%非西班牙裔白人)完成了身体表现、认知功能和多种感觉域的测试。单独的线性回归模型检验了SI与400米步行、扩展短物理性能电池(eSPPB)、四平方步测试(FSST)和爬楼梯测试的关系。执行功能/处理速度的认知测量(数字符号编码(DSC)和轨迹制作测试(Trails) B)被测试为SI与身体表现之间关系的潜在中介。结果:SI量表每降低1分,老年人400米步行速度减慢(β=-0.01 m/s, p=0.03), eSPPB评分降低(β=-0.05分,p)。结论:SI越大,老年人身体运动能力越差,认知加工速度和执行功能的测量在一定程度上介导了这种关联。未来的研究应进一步探讨SI、认知和身体功能之间的时间关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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