4.7 Article

Gait phenotype from mild cognitive impairment to moderate dementia: results from the GOOD initiative

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 3, Pages 527-541

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ene.12882

Keywords

aging; Alzheimer's disease; cohort studies; dementia; gait disorders; mild cognitive impairment; motor control; quantitative gait parameters

Funding

  1. Geneva University Hospitals
  2. Resnick Gerontology Center
  3. Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Yeshiva University
  4. Baasch-Medicus Foundation
  5. National Institutes of Health, USA [R01 AG039330, R01AG036921, RO1AGO44007-01A1]
  6. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) [403000, 491109]
  7. Royal Hobart Hospital Research Foundation
  8. NHMRC [1034483]
  9. NHRMC CDF/HF Future Leader Fellowship
  10. Biomathics

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Background and purposeThe differences in gait abnormalities from the earliest to the later stages of dementia and in the different subtypes of dementia have not been fully examined. This study aims to compare spatiotemporal gait parameters in cognitively healthy individuals, patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and non-amnestic MCI, and patients with mild and moderate stages of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and non-Alzheimer's disease (non-AD). MethodsBased on a cross-sectional design, 1719 participants (77.4 7.3 years, 53.9% female) were recruited from cohorts from seven countries participating in the Gait, Cognition and Decline (GOOD) initiative. Mean values and coefficients of variation of spatiotemporal gait parameters were measured during normal pace walking with the GAITRite system at all sites. ResultsPerformance of spatiotemporal gait parameters declined in parallel with the stage of cognitive decline from MCI status to moderate dementia. Gait parameters of patients with non-amnestic MCI were more disturbed compared to patients with amnestic MCI, and MCI subgroups performed better than demented patients. Patients with non-AD dementia had worse gait performance than those with AD dementia. This degradation of gait parameters was similar between mean values and coefficients of variation of spatiotemporal gait parameters in the earliest stages of cognitive decline, but different in the most advanced stages, especially in the non-AD subtypes. ConclusionsSpatiotemporal gait parameters were more disturbed in the advanced stages of dementia, and more affected in the non-AD dementias than in AD. These findings suggest that quantitative gait parameters could be used as a surrogate marker for improving the diagnosis of dementia. Click to view the accompanying paper in this issue.

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