Mellone Sabato, Mancini Martina, King Laurie A, Horak Fay B, Chiari Lorenzo
Department of Electrical, Electronic and Information Engineering "Guglielmo Marconi", University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.
Department of Neurology, School of Medicine, Oregon Health and Science University, 3181 Sam Jackson Park Road, Portland, OR, 97239-3098, USA.
J Neuroeng Rehabil. 2016 Apr 19;13:39. doi: 10.1186/s12984-016-0147-4.
The ability to turn while walking is essential for daily living activities. Turning is slower and more steps are required to complete a turn in people with Parkinson's disease (PD) compared to control subjects but it is unclear whether this altered strategy is pathological or compensatory. The aim of our study is to characterize the dynamics of postural stability during continuous series of turns while walking at various speeds in subjects with PD compared to control subjects. We hypothesize that people with PD slow their turns to compensate for impaired postural stability.
Motion analysis was used to compare gait kinematics between 12 subjects with PD in their ON state and 19 control subjects while walking continuously on a route composed of short, straight paths interspersed with eleven right and left turns between 30 and 180°. We asked subjects to perform the route at three different speeds: preferred, faster, and slower. Features describing gait spatio-temporal parameters and turning characteristics were extracted from marker trajectories. In addition, to quantify dynamic stability during turns we calculated the distance between the lateral edge of the base of support and the body center of mass, as well as the extrapolated body center of mass.
Subjects with PD had slower turns and did not widen the distance between their feet for turning, compared to control subjects. Subjects with PD tended to cut short their turns compared to control subjects, resulting in a shorter walking path. Dynamic stability was smaller in the PD, compared to the healthy group, particularly for fast turning angles of 90°.
The slower turning speeds and larger turning angles in people with PD might reflect a compensatory strategy to prevent dynamic postural instability given their narrow base of support.
行走时转身的能力对于日常生活活动至关重要。与对照组相比,帕金森病(PD)患者转身较慢,完成一次转身需要更多步数,但尚不清楚这种改变的策略是病理性的还是代偿性的。我们研究的目的是在PD患者与对照组以不同速度行走时连续进行一系列转身过程中,描述姿势稳定性的动态变化。我们假设PD患者会放慢转身速度以补偿姿势稳定性受损。
采用运动分析比较12名处于开期状态的PD患者和19名对照组受试者在由短直路径组成且穿插有11个30°至180°左右转弯的路线上连续行走时的步态运动学。我们要求受试者以三种不同速度完成该路线:偏好速度、较快速度和较慢速度。从标记轨迹中提取描述步态时空参数和转弯特征的参数。此外,为了量化转弯过程中的动态稳定性,我们计算了支撑面外侧边缘与身体质心之间的距离以及外推身体质心。
与对照组相比,PD患者转身较慢,且转弯时双脚间距未加宽。与对照组相比,PD患者倾向于缩短转弯,导致行走路径较短。与健康组相比,PD患者的动态稳定性较小,尤其是在90°快速转弯角度时。
PD患者较慢的转身速度和较大的转弯角度可能反映了一种代偿策略,鉴于其支撑面狭窄,以防止动态姿势不稳定。