AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study explores the connection between motor function impairment and cognitive decline in patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI), suggesting that motor issues could serve as indicators of dementia.
  • - It compares traditional postural control evaluation methods (SPPB and Tinetti) with the Biodex Balance System (BBS) to assess both cognitive and motor performance in elderly patients.
  • - Results indicate that the BBS has a stronger correlation with cognitive performance than traditional scales, highlighting the potential benefits of combining cognitive and motor training to address declines in both areas.

Article Abstract

Objective: There has been growing interest in the past few years on the relationship between impairment of motor functions and cognitive decline, so that the first can be considered a marker of dementia. In MCI patients, the deficit in processing visual information interferes with postural control, causing oscillations and instability. Postural control is usually evaluated through the Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB) test or Tinetti scale, but, to our knowledge, there are no many studies that considered the Biodex Balance System (BBS) in the evaluation of postural controls in MCI patients. The aim of this study was first to confirm the bi- directional relationship between cognitive and motor performance, and then to compare traditional evaluation scales (SPPB and Tinetti) with a biomechanical tool, the BBS.

Materials And Methods: Observational retrospective study. In 45 elderly patients with cognitive impairment we evaluated cognition, assessed with the MMSE and MoCA, malnutrition with the MNA, and sarcopenia with DEXA (ASMMI). Motor performance was assessed with SPPB, Tinetti, and BBS.

Results: MMSE correlated more with BBS than with the traditional scales, while MoCA was also correlated with SPPB and Tinetti scores.

Conclusions: BBS had a stronger correlation with cognitive performance compared with the traditional scales. The relationship between MoCA executive items and the BBS tests suggests the usefulness of targeted interventions involving cognitive stimulation to improve motor performance, and motor training to slow the progression of cognitive decline, particularly in MCI.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.humov.2023.103095DOI Listing

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