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Journal Article

Citation

Bizama F, Medley A, Trudelle-Jackson E, Csiza L. Phys. Occup. Ther. Pediatr. 2018; 38(1): 64-73.

Affiliation

School of Physical Therapy, Texas Woman's University , Dallas , Texas , USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/01942638.2017.1297987

PMID

28394674

Abstract

PURPOSE: Identify the effect of visual distraction on gait parameters in children and describe the role of walking experience (WE) in the management of visual distraction.

METHODS: Forty-two typically developing children, mean age 43.2 months (SD = 22.9) participated and were divided into three groups according to WE: early walkers (6-11 months of WE), preschool walkers (12-37 months of WE), and experienced walkers (38-79 months of WE). Gait parameters measured under two conditions (no visual distraction and with visual distraction) included: velocity, step length, step width, and double limb support percentage (DLS%) of gait cycle. Multivariate analysis of variance assessed differences in gait between groups (effect of WE) and within groups (effect of condition).

RESULTS: Significant main effects of WE group F(8,74) = 5.300, p ≤.001 and visual distraction condition F(4,36) = 2.586, p = 0.053 were found. Visual environmental distraction significantly affected gait performance in children regardless of walking experience. Velocity decreased from 110.04 to 97.73 cm/sec (p = 0.003) while DLS% of gait cycle increased from 18.29% to 20.39% (p = 0.025).

CONCLUSIONS: Results suggest physical therapists need to consider attentional requirements when assessing gait; even in children with more WE. If attention to task is a limiting factor for performance or learning of a motor task, it may need to be addressed directly as part of the treatment plan.


Language: en

Keywords

Divided attention; gait; motor learning; postural control; typically developing children; walking experience

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