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European Journal Of Applied Physiology

Publication date: 2020-09-29
Volume: 121 Pages: 127 - 140
Publisher: Springer Verlag

Author:

Zhang, Yajie
Smeets, Jeroen BJ ; Brenner, Eli ; Verschueren, Sabine ; Duysens, Jacques

Keywords:

Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Physiology, Sport Sciences, Target jump, Correction, Elderly, Leg adjustments, Force, FOOT PLACEMENT ADJUSTMENTS, OBSTACLE AVOIDANCE, VIRTUAL OBSTACLES, HUMAN LOCOMOTION, HEALTHY-YOUNG, DUAL-TASKING, OLDER, GAIT, AGE, STABILITY, Adult, Aged, Aging, Biomechanical Phenomena, Female, Humans, Male, Muscle Contraction, Muscle Strength, Postural Balance, Psychomotor Performance, Walking, 1106 Human Movement and Sports Sciences, 3202 Clinical sciences, 3208 Medical physiology, 4207 Sports science and exercise

Abstract:

PURPOSE: Human sensory and motor systems deteriorate with age. When walking, older adults may therefore find it more difficult to adjust their steps to new visual information, especially considering that such adjustments require control of balance as well as of foot trajectory. Our study investigates the effects of ageing on lower limb responses to unpredictable target shifts. METHODS: Participants walked on a treadmill with projected stepping targets that occasionally shifted in the medial or lateral direction. The shifts occurred at a random moment during the early half of the swing phase of either leg. Kinematic, kinetic and muscle activity data were collected. RESULTS: Older adults responded later and corrected for a smaller proportion of the shift than young adults. The order in which muscle activation changed was similar in both groups, with responses of gluteus medius and semitendinosus from about 120 to 140 ms after the shift. Most muscles responded slightly later to lateral target shifts in the older adults than in the young adults, but this difference was not observed for medial target shifts. Ageing delayed the behavioural responses more than it did the electromyographic (EMG) responses. CONCLUSIONS: Our study suggests that older adults can adjust their walking to small target shifts during the swing phase, but not as well as young adults. Furthermore, muscle strength probably plays a substantial role in the changes in online adjustments during ageing.