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Stride length-cadence relationship is disrupted in below-knee prosthesis users

HOWARD; WALLACE; STOKIC DS
GAIT POSTURE , 2013, vol. 38, n° 4, p. 883-887
Doc n°: 167359
Localisation : Documentation IRR

D.O.I. : http://dx.doi.org/DOI:10.1016/j.gaitpost.2013.04.008
Descripteurs : DF241 - MARCHE DE L'AMPUTE - ETUDES - REEDUCATION

The aim of this study was to evaluate the linearity of the relationship between
stride length and cadence (STRIDELC) over three self-selected speeds (normal,
slow, fast) in below-knee prosthesis users (n=14, 11 men, mean age 43+/-12 years,
mean time since amputation 9.2+/-6.9 years) in comparison to controls (n=20, 11
men, mean age 43+/-17 years). The step length-cadence relationship (STEPLC) was
also calculated for the prosthetic and intact legs in prosthesis users and
compared to the dominant leg of controls. The goodness of linear fit (R2) and
slope over 3 speeds were used as outcome measures. Prosthesis users walked
significantly slower than controls (slow-fast speed means 82-131 vs. 97-169 cm/s,
respectively, ANOVA p<0.0001) due to both lower cadence (42-53 vs. 47-63
strides/min, p<0.0001) and shorter stride length (116-149 vs. 123-161 cm,
p<0.0001). The R2 of STRIDELC relationship in below-knee prosthesis users
(0.76+/-0.13) was significantly lower than in controls (0.91+/-0.03, p<0.001).
The R2 values of STEPLC relationship between the prosthetic and intact legs in
prosthesis users were correlated (r=0.85, p<0.001) and both (0.67+/-0.19,
0.58+/-0.21, respectively) were significantly smaller than in the dominant leg of
controls (0.86+/-0.04, p<0.01). The slopes of STRIDELC and STEPLC were not
different. The R2 of 0.84 for STRIDELC best discriminated prosthesis users from
controls with high sensitivity (71%) and specificity (95%). The results indicate
that coupling between stride/step length and cadence is disturbed in prosthesis
users. Upon further investigation, the goodness of linear fit may prove to be
useful in assessing prosthetic design, optimizing prosthetic fit, and predicting
clinical outcomes.
CI - Copyright (c) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Langue : ANGLAIS

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