1. The Importance of Cognitive Executive Functions in Gait Recovery After Total Hip Arthroplasty
- Author
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Marco Biffi, E Zirone, Daniele Mazziotti, Catia Pelosi, Matteo Preti, Laura Zapparoli, Giuseppe Banfi, Francesco Negrini, Negrini, F., Preti, M., Zirone, E., Mazziotti, D., Biffi, M., Pelosi, C., Banfi, G., Zapparoli, L., Negrini, F, Preti, M, Zirone, E, Mazziotti, D, Biffi, M, Pelosi, C, Banfi, G, and Zapparoli, L
- Subjects
Male ,Rehabilitation hospital ,030506 rehabilitation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Gait Rehabilitation ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Total Hip Arthroplasty ,Cohort Studies ,Executive functions ,Executive Function ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Gait (human) ,medicine ,Humans ,Cognitive skill ,Cognitive decline ,Mini–Mental State Examination ,Rehabilitation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Gait Recovery ,Recovery of Function ,Middle Aged ,Walking Speed ,Exercise Test ,Female ,Gait Analysis ,0305 other medical science ,business ,human activities ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Objective To determine the influence of cognitive functioning on gait recovery after total hip arthroplasty. Design Prospective cohort study. Setting Rehabilitation hospital. Participants Patients (N=40) who underwent a total hip arthroplasty, with normal cognitive functioning and without any other relevant medical condition, were recruited and studied before surgery and at the beginning and the end of the rehabilitation program. Main Outcome Measures Gait speed (10-Meter Walk Test [10MWT]) and gait functional mobility (Timed Up and Go [TUG] test), measured at the time of discharge from the rehabilitation unit, were the primary outcomes. The candidate predictors were the cognitive and psychological variables collected in the presurgery phase, together with other potentially informative measures such as age, education, perceived pain, body mass index, presurgical gait speed and functional mobility. Results Our results suggest the existence of a direct relationship between cognitive functioning, with specific reference to high-level frontal executive functions, and the postoperative gait progress: the better the cognitive functioning in the preoperative phase, the better the course of recovery in terms of gait speed and functional mobility. In particular, the performance of the Frontal Assessment Battery test, together with age, perceived pain. Presurgical gait speed and functional mobility, was the best predictor of recovery of walking measured by 10MWT and TUG. Conclusions The present study highlights the importance of cognitive functioning, together with clinical and demographic features, in the postsurgical recovery of walking, even in the absence of cognitive decline. In particular, these data show the crucial role of higher-order cognitive processes, such as executive functions, involved in the formulation of motor plans and their integration with proprioceptive and visual cues.
- Published
- 2020