What is your doctor doing to solve stroke fatigue?
Or is stroke fatigue once again
somebody elses' problem to solve?
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fneur.2014.00279/full?
Aida Sehle1,2,
Manfred Vieten1,
Annegret Mündermann1,3 and
Christian Dettmers2,4*
- 1Division of Sport Science, University of Konstanz, Konstanz, Germany
- 2Lurija Institute, Kliniken Schmieder Allensbach, Allensbach, Germany
- 3Department of Orthopaedics, University Hospital Basel, Basel, Switzerland
- 4Kliniken Schmieder Konstanz, Konstanz, Germany
Fatigue is often reported in stroke patients.
However, it is still
unclear if fatigue in stroke patients is more prominent, more frequent
or more “typical” than in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) and if
the pathophysiology differs between these two populations. The purpose
of this study was to compare motor fatigue and fatigue-induced changes
in kinematic gait parameters between stroke patients, MS patients, and
healthy persons. Gait parameters at the beginning and end of a treadmill
walking test were assessed in 10 stroke patients, 40 MS patients, and
20 healthy subjects. The recently developed Fatigue index Kliniken
Schmieder (FKS) based on change of the movement’s attractor and its
variability was used to measure motor fatigue. Six stroke patients had a
pathological FKS. The FKS (indicating the level of motor fatigue) in
stroke patients was similar compared to MS patients. Stroke patients had
smaller step length, step height and greater step width, circumduction
with the right and left leg, and greater sway compared to the other
groups at the beginning and at the end of test. A severe walking
impairment in stroke patients does not necessarily cause a pathological
FKS indicating motor fatigue. Moreover, the FKS can be used as a measure
of motor fatigue in stroke and MS and may also be applicable to other
diseases.
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