4.5 Article

Executive dysfunction and effectiveness of physical program in older adults: which association?

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AGING CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
卷 35, 期 1, 页码 101-106

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s40520-022-02276-9

关键词

Dual-task gait performance; Executive status; Rehabilitation

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This study aimed to examine the association between executive function and the effectiveness of personalised exercise interventions on gait performance among older-old adults. The results showed that personalised rehabilitation programs significantly improved dual-task gait speed and mobility performance in older adults, regardless of their baseline executive function status.
Background Little is known about the association between executive function and the magnitude of improvement from personalised exercise interventions on gait performance among older-old adults. Aim We examined whether the effectiveness of personalised intervention on gait performance is dependent on the patient's baseline dysexecutive syndrome, as assessed by the Frontal Assessment Battery. Methods A total of 175 older community-dwellers (83.57 +/- 5.2 years; 70.2% female) were recruited from the day centre for after-care and rehabilitation in the Nantes Ambulatory Centre of the Clinical Gerontology (France), and were followed during a pre-post-intervention, single-arm retrospective design. The intervention consisted of an individual personalised rehabilitation program over a period of 7 weeks, with twice-weekly sessions (45 min each). Gait speed in four conditions (preferred, fast, and under two dual-task conditions), Timed Up and Go test, and handgrip strength test were assessed. Results Using a pre-post analysis of covariance, a significant increase in dual-task gait speed while counting (+ 0.10 m/s; + 15%) and in dual-fluency gait speed (+ 0.06 m/s; + 10%), and in Timed Up and Go performance (- 2.9 s; + 17.8%) was observed after the rehabilitation program, regardless the baseline executive status. Discussion An individual personalized intervention is effective to improve mobility performance and the dual-task gait speed in older-old adults. The magnitude of those effects is independent of the patient's baseline characteristics including the executive function status. Conclusions Even the most deficient baseline characteristics of patients should not be viewed as clinical barrier for implementing a beneficial individual intervention in high-risk older adults.

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