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Journal Article

Citation

Allali G, van der Meulen M, Beauchet O, Rieger SW, Vuilleumier P, Assal F. J. Gerontol. A Biol. Sci. Med. Sci. 2013; 69(11): 1389-1398.

Affiliation

Department of Neurology, Geneva University Hospitals, University of Geneva, 4 rue Gabrielle-Perret-Gentil, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland. gilles.allali@hcuge.ch.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, Gerontological Society of America)

DOI

10.1093/gerona/glt207

PMID

24368777

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Aging is often associated with modifications of gait. Recent studies have revealed a strong relationship between gait and executive functions in healthy and pathological aging. We hypothesized that modification of gait due to aging may be related to changes in frontal lobe function.

METHODS: Fourteen younger (27.0±3.6 years) and 14 older healthy adults (66.0±3.5 years) performed a motor imagery task of gait as well as a matched visual imagery task. Task difficulty was modulated to investigate differential activation for precise control of gait. Task performance was assessed by recording motor imagery latencies, eye movements, and electromyography during functional magnetic resonance imaging scanning.

RESULTS: Our results showed that both healthy older and young adults recruited a network of brain regions comprising the bilateral supplementary motor cortex and primary motor cortex, right prefrontal cortex, and cerebellum, during motor imagery of gait. We observed an age-related increase in brain activity in the right supplementary motor area (BA6), the right orbitofrontal cortex (BA11), and the left dorsolateral frontal cortex (BA10). Activity in the left hippocampus was significantly modulated by task difficulty in the elderly participants. Executive functioning correlated with magnitude of increases in right primary motor cortex (BA4) during the motor imagery task.

CONCLUSIONS: Besides demonstrating a general overlap in brain regions recruited in young and older participants, this study shows age-related changes in cerebral activation during mental imagery of gait. Our results underscore the importance of executive function (dorsolateral frontal cortex) and spatial navigation or memory function (hippocampus) in gait control in elderly individuals.


Language: en

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