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Linear dependence of peak, mean, and pressure-time integral values in plantar pressure images

KEIJSERS NL; STOLWIJK NM; PATAKY TC
GAIT POSTURE , 2010, vol. 31, n° 1, p. 140-142
Doc n°: 144739
Localisation : Documentation IRR

D.O.I. : http://dx.doi.org/DOI:10.1016/j.gaitpost.2009.08.248
Descripteurs : DE82 - EXPLORATION EXAMENS BILANS - PIED

Dynamic plantar pressure images are routinely used in clinical gait assessment,
and peak pressure, mean pressure, and pressure-time integral are the most
frequently used parameters to summarize these images. Many studies report only
one parameter, but other studies report all three. The interdependency of these
variables has not been explicitly studied previously.
The purpose of this study
was to describe the linear relation between these three pressure parameters. 327
subjects walked normally over a pressure plate. Peak pressure, mean pressure and
pressure-time integral were calculated for 10 different anatomical areas and,
after applying a previously described spatial normalization procedure, these
variables were also calculated for each pixel. Mean pressure was highly
correlated with peak pressure (r=0.90+/-0.09) and pressure-time integral
(r=0.81+/-0.13) for pixels. Peak pressure and pressure-time integral showed a
linear correlation coefficient of r=0.78+/-0.21. The pressure parameters of the
forefoot pixels were more highly correlated than the heel pixels. The current
results have two major implications: (1) plantar pressure parameters (peak, mean,
and impulse) can be reasonably compared across studies, even across parameters,
and (2) the variables most commonly used to characterize plantar pressures are
highly inter-correlated, implying that a smaller set of parameters may more
efficiently capture the biomechanical behavior of interest.

Langue : ANGLAIS

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