4.7 Article

Measuring Hand Sensory Function and Force Control in Older Adults: Are Current Hand Assessment Tools Enough?

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/gerona/glab368

Keywords

Functional performance; Geriatric assessment; Hand dexterity; Motor control

Funding

  1. School of Kinesiology at the University of Michigan

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This study aims to demonstrate performance differences in submaximal force control and tactile pattern recognition in healthy older adults. The results show that older adults have impaired ability to discriminate tactile patterns and control low grip forces, despite no differences in grip strength or cognition compared to young adults.
Background The ability to grasp and manipulate objects is essential for performing activities of daily living. However, there is limited information regarding age-related behavioral differences in hand sensorimotor function due, in part, to the lack of assessment tools capable of measuring subtle but important differences in hand function. The purpose of this study was to demonstrate performance differences in submaximal force control and tactile pattern recognition in healthy older adults using 2 custom-designed sensorimotor assessment tools. Methods Sensorimotor function was assessed in 13 healthy older adults (mean age 72.2 +/- 5.5 years, range: 65-84 years) and 13 young adults (mean age 20 +/- 1.4 years, range: 19-23 years). Clinical assessments included the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), monofilament testing, maximum voluntary contraction (MVC), and Grooved Pegboard Test. Sensorimotor assessments included submaximal (5, 20% MVC) grip force step-tracking and tactile pattern recognition tasks. Results Clinical assessments revealed no or minimal group differences in MVC, monofilament thresholds, and MoCA. However, sensorimotor assessments showed that older adults took longer to discriminate tactile patterns and had poorer accuracy than young adults. Older adults also produced submaximal forces less smoothly than young adults at the 20% force level while greater variability in force maintenance was seen at 5% but not 20% MVC. Conclusions These results demonstrate the ability to integrate higher-order tactile information and control low grip forces is impaired in older adults despite no differences in grip strength or cognition. These findings underscore the need for more sensitive evaluation methods that focus on sensorimotor ability reflective of daily activities.

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