Department of Physical Therapy, Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami, Miami, Florida, USA.
Phys Ther. 2011 Jan;91(1):48-60. doi: 10.2522/ptj.20090359. Epub 2010 Nov 4.
Impaired walking limits function after spinal cord injury (SCI), but training-related improvements are possible even in people with chronic motor incomplete SCI.
The objective of this study was to compare changes in walking speed and distance associated with 4 locomotor training approaches.
This study was a single-blind, randomized clinical trial.
This study was conducted in a rehabilitation research laboratory.
Participants were people with minimal walking function due to chronic SCI.
Participants (n=74) trained 5 days per week for 12 weeks with the following approaches: treadmill-based training with manual assistance (TM), treadmill-based training with stimulation (TS), overground training with stimulation (OG), and treadmill-based training with robotic assistance (LR).
Overground walking speed and distance were the primary outcome measures.
In participants who completed the training (n=64), there were overall effects for speed (effect size index [d]=0.33) and distance (d=0.35). For speed, there were no significant between-group differences; however, distance gains were greatest with OG. Effect sizes for speed and distance were largest with OG (d=0.43 and d=0.40, respectively). Effect sizes for speed were the same for TM and TS (d=0.28); there was no effect for LR. The effect size for distance was greater with TS (d=0.16) than with TM or LR, for which there was no effect. Ten participants who improved with training were retested at least 6 months after training; walking speed at this time was slower than that at the conclusion of training but remained faster than before training.
It is unknown whether the training dosage and the emphasis on training speed were optimal. Robotic training that requires active participation would likely yield different results.
In people with chronic motor incomplete SCI, walking speed improved with both overground training and treadmill-based training; however, walking distance improved to a greater extent with overground training.
脊髓损伤(SCI)后行走能力受限,但即使是慢性运动不完全 SCI 患者,通过训练也可能获得改善。
本研究旨在比较 4 种运动训练方法与步行速度和距离变化的相关性。
这是一项单盲、随机临床试验。
本研究在康复研究实验室进行。
参与者为因慢性 SCI 而行走功能受限的患者。
参与者(n=74)每周训练 5 天,共 12 周,采用以下方法进行训练:带手动辅助的跑步机训练(TM)、带刺激的跑步机训练(TS)、地面训练带刺激(OG)和带机器人辅助的跑步机训练(LR)。
地面行走速度和距离是主要的观察指标。
在完成训练的 64 名参与者中,速度(效应大小指数[d]=0.33)和距离(d=0.35)均存在整体效应。速度方面,各组间无显著差异;然而,OG 组的距离增益最大。OG 的速度和距离增益的效应量最大(分别为 d=0.43 和 d=0.40)。TM 和 TS 的速度效应量相同(d=0.28),LR 无影响。TS 的距离效应量大于 TM 或 LR(d=0.16),而 TM 和 LR 无影响。10 名训练有改善的参与者在训练结束至少 6 个月后进行了复测;此时的行走速度比训练结束时慢,但仍比训练前快。
尚不清楚训练剂量和对训练速度的重视程度是否最佳。需要主动参与的机器人训练可能会产生不同的结果。
在慢性运动不完全 SCI 患者中,跑步机训练和地面训练均可提高行走速度;然而,地面训练更能显著提高行走距离。