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The dynamic relationship between cognitive function and walking speed: the English Longitudinal Study of Aging

The dynamic relationship between cognitive function and walking speed: the English Longitudinal Study of Aging
The dynamic relationship between cognitive function and walking speed: the English Longitudinal Study of Aging
Cross-sectional studies show that older people with better cognition tend to walk faster. Whether this association reflects an influence of fluid cognition upon walking speed, vice versa, a bidirectional relationship or the effect of common causes is unclear. We used linear mixed effects models to examine the dynamic relationship between usual walking speed and fluid cognition, as measured by executive function, verbal memory and processing speed, in 2,654 men and women aged 60 to over 90 years from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. There was a bidirectional relationship between walking speed and fluid cognition. After adjusting for age and sex, better performance on executive function, memory and processing speed was associated with less yearly decline in walking speed over the 6-year follow-up period; faster walking speed was associated with less yearly decline in each cognitive domain; and less yearly decline in each cognitive domain was associated with less yearly decline in walking speed. Effect sizes were small. After further adjustment for other covariates, effect sizes were attenuated but most remained statistically significant. We found some evidence that walking speed and the fluid cognitive domains of executive function and processing speed may change in parallel with increasing age. Investigation of the association between walking speed and cognition earlier in life is needed to better understand the origins of this relation and inform the development and timing of interventions.
cohort studies, cognitive function, walking speed, ageing
0161-9152
9682-9693
Gale, C.R.
5bb2abb3-7b53-42d6-8aa7-817e193140c8
Allerhand, M.
30b3123e-2d5e-40c3-b51b-c4bb38c951d7
Sayer, A.A.
fb4c2053-6d51-4fc1-9489-c3cb431b0ffb
Cooper, C.
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Deary, I.J.
e3403cfe-eb5b-4941-903d-87ef0db89c60
Gale, C.R.
5bb2abb3-7b53-42d6-8aa7-817e193140c8
Allerhand, M.
30b3123e-2d5e-40c3-b51b-c4bb38c951d7
Sayer, A.A.
fb4c2053-6d51-4fc1-9489-c3cb431b0ffb
Cooper, C.
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Deary, I.J.
e3403cfe-eb5b-4941-903d-87ef0db89c60

Gale, C.R., Allerhand, M., Sayer, A.A., Cooper, C. and Deary, I.J. (2014) The dynamic relationship between cognitive function and walking speed: the English Longitudinal Study of Aging. Age, 36 (4), 9682-9693. (doi:10.1007/s11357-014-9682-8). (PMID:24997019)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Cross-sectional studies show that older people with better cognition tend to walk faster. Whether this association reflects an influence of fluid cognition upon walking speed, vice versa, a bidirectional relationship or the effect of common causes is unclear. We used linear mixed effects models to examine the dynamic relationship between usual walking speed and fluid cognition, as measured by executive function, verbal memory and processing speed, in 2,654 men and women aged 60 to over 90 years from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. There was a bidirectional relationship between walking speed and fluid cognition. After adjusting for age and sex, better performance on executive function, memory and processing speed was associated with less yearly decline in walking speed over the 6-year follow-up period; faster walking speed was associated with less yearly decline in each cognitive domain; and less yearly decline in each cognitive domain was associated with less yearly decline in walking speed. Effect sizes were small. After further adjustment for other covariates, effect sizes were attenuated but most remained statistically significant. We found some evidence that walking speed and the fluid cognitive domains of executive function and processing speed may change in parallel with increasing age. Investigation of the association between walking speed and cognition earlier in life is needed to better understand the origins of this relation and inform the development and timing of interventions.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 5 July 2014
Published date: August 2014
Keywords: cohort studies, cognitive function, walking speed, ageing
Organisations: Faculty of Medicine

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 367014
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/367014
ISSN: 0161-9152
PURE UUID: 03bc8564-24d5-4329-a5fb-c3906b157bef
ORCID for C.R. Gale: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3361-8638
ORCID for C. Cooper: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3510-0709

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 21 Jul 2014 11:04
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:45

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Contributors

Author: C.R. Gale ORCID iD
Author: M. Allerhand
Author: A.A. Sayer
Author: C. Cooper ORCID iD
Author: I.J. Deary

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