Walking execution is not affected by divided attention in patients with multiple sclerosis with no disability, but there is a motor planning impairment

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Abstract

Purpose: We analysed the cognitive influence on walking in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, in the absence of clinical disability. Method: A case-control study was conducted with 12 MS patients with no disability and 12 matched healthy controls. Subjects were referred for completion a timed walk test of 10 m and a 3D-kinematic analysis. Participants were instructed to walk at a comfortable speed in a dual-task (arithmetic task) condition, and motor planning was measured by mental chronometry. Results: Scores of walking speed and cadence showed no statistically significant differences between the groups in the three conditions. The dual-task condition showed an increase in the double support duration in both groups. Motor imagery analysis showed statistically significant differences between real and imagined walking in patients. Conclusion: MS patients with no disability did not show any influence of divided attention on walking execution. However, motor planning was overestimated as compared with real walking.

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Nogueira, L. A. C., dos Santos, L. T., Sabino, P. G., Alvarenga, R. M. P., & Thuler, L. C. S. (2013). Walking execution is not affected by divided attention in patients with multiple sclerosis with no disability, but there is a motor planning impairment. Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria, 71(8), 521–526. https://doi.org/10.1590/0004-282X20130080

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