Adaptation in locomotor stability, cognition, and metabolic cost during sensory discordance.
Aviat Space Environ Med
; 84(6): 567-72, 2013 Jun.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-23745284
BACKGROUND: Locomotor instability may affect planetary extravehicular activities during the initial adaptation to the new gravitational environment. The goal of this study was to quantify the locomotor, cognitive, and metabolic effects of exposure to a discordant sensory environment. METHODS: A treadmill mounted on a 6-degree-of-freedom motion base was used to present 15 healthy subjects with a destabilizing support surface while they walked. Dependent measures of locomotor stability, cognitive load, and metabolic cost were stride frequency (SF), reaction time (RT), and the volume of oxygen consumed (Vo2), respectively. Subjects completed an 8-min baseline walk followed by 20 min of walking with a continuous, sinusoidal, laterally oscillating support-surface perturbation. Data for minutes 1, 7, 13, and 20 of the support-surface perturbation period were compared with the baseline. RESULTS: SF, RT, and Vo2 were significantly greater during support-surface motion than during the baseline walking condition and showed a trend toward recovery to baseline levels during the perturbation period. Results demonstrated that adaptation to walking in a discordant sensory environment has quantifiable and significant costs in SF, RT, and Vo2 as shown by mean increases of 9%, 20%, and 4%, respectively, collected during the first minute of exposure. By the fourth minute of exposure, mean Vo2 consumption had increased to 20% over its baseline. DISCUSSION: We believe that preflight sensorimotor adaptation training paradigms will impart gains in stability and the ability to multitask, and might increase productive mission time by extending work time in extravehicular activity suits where metabolic expenditure is a limiting factor.
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Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Consumo de Oxigênio
/
Adaptação Fisiológica
/
Caminhada
/
Cognição
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Gravidade Alterada
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Atividade Extraespaçonave
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2013
Tipo de documento:
Article
País de afiliação:
Estados Unidos