Pages that link to "Q50980126"
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The following pages link to Walking and thinking in persons with multiple sclerosis who vary in disability (Q50980126):
Displaying 14 items.
- Motor-Cognitive Dual-Task Training in Persons With Neurologic Disorders: A Systematic Review (Q27314102) (← links)
- Frontal brain activation changes due to dual-tasking under partial body weight support conditions in older adults with multiple sclerosis. (Q32173442) (← links)
- Cognitive-motor interference in multiple sclerosis: a systematic review of evidence, correlates, and consequences (Q35206796) (← links)
- Effects on Balance and Walking with the CoDuSe Balance Exercise Program in People with Multiple Sclerosis: A Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial (Q37500825) (← links)
- Oxygen cost of walking in persons with multiple sclerosis: disability matters, but why? (Q37661540) (← links)
- Measuring the cost of cognitive-motor dual tasking during walking in multiple sclerosis. (Q38245293) (← links)
- Targeting Dynamic Balance in Falls-Prevention Interventions in Multiple Sclerosis: Recommendations from the International MS Falls Prevention Research Network (Q39037407) (← links)
- The descriptive epidemiology of daily sitting time as a sedentary behavior in multiple sclerosis. (Q40665470) (← links)
- Effect of Cognitive Demand on Functional Mobility in Ambulatory Individuals with Multiple Sclerosis (Q41469206) (← links)
- Comparing Three Dual-Task Methods and the Relationship to Physical and Cognitive Impairment in People with Multiple Sclerosis and Controls (Q41784630) (← links)
- Effects of walking direction and cognitive challenges on gait in persons with multiple sclerosis (Q42208963) (← links)
- An innovative training program based on virtual reality and treadmill: effects on gait of persons with multiple sclerosis (Q51110369) (← links)
- Intensive Multimodal Training to Improve Gait Resistance, Mobility, Balance and Cognitive Function in Persons With Multiple Sclerosis: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial (Q57490187) (← links)
- The Role of Premotor Areas in Dual Tasking in Healthy Controls and Persons With Multiple Sclerosis: An fNIRS Imaging Study (Q60959804) (← links)