Thursday, December 23, 2021

Abnormal Gait Movements Prior to a Near Fall in Individuals After Stroke

By not specifying anything for suggested interventions you made this completely useless.

Abnormal Gait Movements Prior to a Near Fall in Individuals After Stroke

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.arrct.2021.100156Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

We analyzed movements that occurred 1 cycle before a near fall after stroke.

We compared the usual gait and the last cycle before the near fall in each patient.

Decreased gait speed was found in the cycle before the near fall.

Excessive lateral center of mass movement was found in the pre–near fall cycle.

Abstract

Objective

To investigate the abnormal kinematic and kinetic movements in the last gait cycle before a near fall in individuals poststroke, where a near fall is defined as a physical therapist feeling the need to stabilize a patient.

Design

Retrospective study.

Participants

Twenty-five adults (22 men, 3 women; N=25) with an average age of 66.3 years and mean duration from stroke of 4 months who required manual assistance for a sudden imbalance during routine 3-dimensional motion analysis.

Interventions

Not applicable.

Main Outcome Measures

We compared the averaged usual gait cycle and the last cycle before the near-falling gait cycle (pre–near-falling gait cycle). We obtained the following spatiotemporal parameters: gait velocity, gait cycle duration, mediolateral center of mass displacement, step length, step width, joint moments, and angular displacement of the trunk in a cycle. Peak values of joint moments and trunk angle displacement were calculated.

Results

Etiology for near falls included toe trip, mediolateral perturbation, and knee collapse. We found the following significant differences in the pre–near-falling gait cycle compared with the usual gait cycle: decreased gait velocity, prolonged total cycle time, and excessive mediolateral center of mass displacement.

Conclusions

Decreased gait velocity, prolonged cycle time, and excessive mediolateral center of mass displacement may be a sign of an impending fall in people with impaired gait after stroke.

 

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