Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2014.00259
Title: Older age relates to worsening of fine motor skills: A population based study of middle-aged and elderly persons
Authors: Hoogendam, Y.Y
van der Lijn, F
Vernooij, M.W
Hofman, A
Niessen, W.J
van der Lugt, A
Ikram, M.A 
van der Geest, J.N
Keywords: adult
aged
Article
brain size
clinical trial
cohort analysis
community living
controlled study
drawing
female
gray matter
hand movement
human
image analysis
major clinical study
male
middle aged
motor performance
neuroimaging
nuclear magnetic resonance imaging
nuclear magnetic resonance scanner
prospective study
quantitative analysis
senescence
sex difference
tremor
white matter
white matter lesion
Issue Date: 2014
Citation: Hoogendam, Y.Y, van der Lijn, F, Vernooij, M.W, Hofman, A, Niessen, W.J, van der Lugt, A, Ikram, M.A, van der Geest, J.N (2014). Older age relates to worsening of fine motor skills: A population based study of middle-aged and elderly persons. Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience 6 (SEP) : 259. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2014.00259
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Introduction: In a population-based study of 1,912 community-dwelling persons of 45 years and older we investigated the relation between age and fine motor skills using the Archimedes spiral drawing test. Also, we studied the effect of brain volume on fine motor skills. Methods: Participants were required to trace a template of a spiral on an electronic drawing board. Clinical scores from this test were obtained by visual assessment of the drawings. Quantitative measures were objectively determined from the recorded data of the drawings. As tremor is known to occur increasingly with advancing age, we also rated drawings to assess presence of tremor. Results: We found presence of a tremor in 1.3% of the drawings. In the group without tremor we found that older age was related to worse fine motor skills. Additionally, participants over the age of 75 showed increasing deviations from the template when drawing the spiral. Larger cerebral volume and smaller white matter lesion volume were related to better spiral drawing performance, whereas cerebellar volume was not related to spiral drawing performance. Conclusions: Older age is related to worse fine motor skills, which can be captured by clinical scoring or quantitative measures of the Archimedes spiral-drawing test. Persons with a tremor performed worse on almost all measures of the spiral-drawing test. Furthermore, larger cerebral volume is related to better fine motor skills. © 2014 Hoogendam, Van_der_lijn, Vernooij, Hofman, Niessen, Van_der_lugt, Ikram and Van_der_geest.
Source Title: Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/181529
ISSN: 16634365
DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2014.00259
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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