The effect of age and proprioceptive illusion susceptibility on gait.

Physiol Behav

Department of Psychology, University of Nevada, Reno, 1664 N Virginia St, Reno, NV, 89557, USA.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored how age-related declines in gait are connected to proprioception, specifically focusing on susceptibility to proprioceptive illusions.
  • The researchers measured the effects of these illusions on gait in both young and older adults, finding that illusion perceivers showed greater errors in joint position matching.
  • The findings indicate that age does not affect susceptibility to these illusions, but those who do experience them have worse gait characteristics, suggesting a link to diminished proprioceptive acuity independent of age.

Article Abstract

Objective: Age-related gait decline has been associated with impaired proprioception, one's internal awareness of spatial location and movement. Although impaired proprioception has further been linked to greater susceptibility to proprioceptive illusions, it is unclear the impact such susceptibility has on gait and its interaction with age. The purpose of this study was to address these uncertainties.

Methods: We measured proprioceptive illusions induced by muscle spindle manipulation and gait in young and older adults. We also compared illusory measures with traditionally used joint position matching to examine if illusory susceptibility can reveal proprioceptive impairments.

Results: We found no effect of age on proprioceptive illusion susceptibility or joint position matching error. Compared to non-perceivers, illusion perceivers across both age groups showed greater joint matching error, suggesting reduced proprioceptive acuity. Consistent with previous studies, older adults had reduced cadence, gait velocity, and step length compared to young adults in both single- and dual-task walking. Interestingly, illusion perceivers, regardless of age, showed reduced cadence and step width compared to non-perceivers.

Conclusions: Our results suggest that gait impairments observed in those who perceive these proprioceptive illusions are age-independent, potentially rooted in deteriorated proprioception.

Significance: This is the first study to examine these relations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11568900PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.physbeh.2024.114717DOI Listing

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