Liang Huaqing, Ke Xiang, Wu Jianhua
Department of Kinesiology and Health, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, 30302, USA.
Department of Kinesiology and Health, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, 30302, USA; Center for Pediatric Locomotion Sciences, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, 30302, USA.
Gait Posture. 2018 Oct;66:260-266. doi: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2018.09.010. Epub 2018 Sep 12.
Children with Down syndrome (DS) show underdeveloped motor strategy and anticipatory locomotor adjustments (ALA) before crossing an obstacle. Stairs presents another important setting to study environment navigation and motor adaptation. Inclusion of external ankle load is often used to perturb the stability of a system and observe the emergence of new patterns.
How do stair height and external ankle load affect motor strategy and ALA in 5-to-11-year-old children with typical development (TD) and with DS when approaching the stairs?
Fourteen children with DS and 14 age- and sex-matched children with TD participated in the study. They walked along a 5-meter walkway and ascended 3-step staircases. There were three staircases (low, moderate, and high heights) and 2 loading conditions (no load and ankle load). A 3D motion capture system was used to collect data. Motor strategy was coded for each trial. Step length, width, time, and velocity, minimum toe clearance, and horizontal toe velocity were calculated for the last four steps before stair ascent. Mixed ANOVAs with repeated measures were conducted for statistical analysis.
The TD group walked up all the stairs, while the DS group displayed a strategy shift from walking to crawling when the stairs became higher. While the TD group maintained the values of most spatiotemporal variables, the DS group continuously decreased step length and velocity but not step width over the last four approaching steps. Ankle load decreased step length, step velocity, minimum toe clearance, and horizontal toe velocity in the DS group, to a greater extent, than in the TD group.
Children with DS show underdeveloped motor strategy and ALA when approaching the stairs, and external ankle load further disrupts these patterns. Stair negotiation appears to be an effective assessment tool for evaluating motor adaptation in children with DS.
唐氏综合征(DS)患儿在跨越障碍物前表现出运动策略不发达和预期性运动调整(ALA)不足。楼梯是研究环境导航和运动适应的另一个重要场景。增加外部脚踝负荷常用于干扰系统稳定性并观察新模式的出现。
楼梯高度和外部脚踝负荷如何影响5至11岁发育正常(TD)和唐氏综合征患儿在接近楼梯时的运动策略和ALA?
14名唐氏综合征患儿和14名年龄及性别匹配的发育正常儿童参与了该研究。他们沿着一条5米长的走道行走并登上3级楼梯。有三种楼梯(低、中、高)和2种负荷条件(无负荷和脚踝负荷)。使用三维运动捕捉系统收集数据。对每个试验的运动策略进行编码。计算登楼梯前最后四步的步长、步宽、时间、速度、最小脚趾间隙和水平脚趾速度。进行重复测量的混合方差分析以进行统计分析。
发育正常组能够走上所有楼梯,而唐氏综合征组在楼梯变高时表现出从行走策略转变为爬行策略。发育正常组在接近楼梯的最后四步中,大多数时空变量的值保持不变,而唐氏综合征组的步长和速度持续下降,但步宽没有下降。脚踝负荷使唐氏综合征组的步长、步速、最小脚趾间隙和水平脚趾速度下降的程度比发育正常组更大。
唐氏综合征患儿在接近楼梯时表现出运动策略和ALA不发达,外部脚踝负荷进一步扰乱了这些模式。楼梯通行似乎是评估唐氏综合征患儿运动适应能力的有效评估工具。