A dual-task gait test detects mild cognitive impairment with a specificity of 91.2%

Author:

Wang Yuxin,Yang Qing,Tian Chong,Zeng Jing,Yang Mengshu,Li Jie,Mao Jing

Abstract

BackgroundMild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a valuable intervention window in the progress of senile dementia, but the question of how to easily and conveniently detect MCI in the community remains unanswered. Gait performance reflects cognitive function, but how to reliably detect MCI through gait testing is still being explored.ObjectiveTo develop a dual-task gait testing method that could reliably detect MCI in the community.MethodsA cross-sectional diagnostic study was conducted in 111 older adults (mean age = 72.14 ± 6.90 years) from five communities in Wuhan, China. A novel dual-task gait testing method, walking while identifying animals in pictures (AniP-DT gait test), was developed. The participants were classified into MCI or cognitively intact based on their performance on the Montreal Cognitive Assessment Scale (MoCA). Gait performance was assessed using both single-task and the AniP-DT gait test. Multiple linear regression and binary logistic regression were used to model the association between gait speed and cognitive status, and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis was used to assess the discrimination ability.ResultsCompared to the cognitively intact group, the gait speed of the MCI group was lower in both single-task and the AniP-DT gait tests. The gait speed of the AniP-DT gait test was significantly associated with MoCA scores after adjusting the covariates and exhibited good discrimination ability in MCI detection (AUC = 0.814), with a specificity of 91.2%. ROC analysis of the logistic models revealed better discrimination ability of dual-task gait velocity when adjusted with age and years of education (AUC = 0.862).ConclusionThe evidence in this study suggested that the AniP-DT gait test could be an easy and reliable screening tool for MCI in community older adults.

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

General Neuroscience

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