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Journal Article

Citation

Austin HM, Balendra N, Langenderfer JE, Ustinova KI. Brain Inj. 2018; 32(6): 739-746.

Affiliation

Department of Physical Therapy , Central Michigan University , Mt. Pleasant , MI , USA.

Copyright

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

DOI

10.1080/02699052.2018.1444203

PMID

29494269

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Walking requires precise coordination of bilateral lower extremity motions at all joints. This ability can be affected by traumatic brain injury (TBI). The study investigated inter-joint coordination of lower extremities during overground walking after TBI.

METHODS: Ten individuals with post-injury ataxia, postural stability and gait abnormalities, as well as 10 sex- and age-matched control subjects were involved in the study. Participants walked at self-selected speed in three experimental conditions: normal walking without any additional task; walking with a narrow base of support, and walking while holding a cup full of water. Inter-joint coordination was analysed as the percentage of gait cycle during which the leg movement was decomposed with 0% indicating simultaneous motion of the two joints (i.e. hip-knee, knee-ankle, and hip-ankle) through the entire gait cycle or 100% indicating motion of only one joint. Decomposition was calculated for each pair of joints and for the left and right leg separately.

RESULTS: Participants with TBI showed greater decomposition indices and poorer inter-joint coordination respectively than control individuals for all joint pairs (p < 0.01). Walking with the narrower base of support or with a cup, increased movement decomposition in the TBI group, but not in the control group.

CONCLUSION: The results revealed post-injury gait impairment that manifests as decomposition of multi-joint motions of the lower extremities during overground walking.


Language: en

Keywords

Gait; coordination; dual-task walking

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