College of Engineering University of Florida USA.
Department of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation Harvard Medical School and Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital USA.
Gait Posture. 2020 Jan;75:121-128. doi: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2019.10.023. Epub 2019 Oct 17.
Returning to community walking remains a major challenge for persons with incomplete spinal cord injury (iSCI) due, in part, to impaired interlimb coordination. Here, we examined spatial and temporal features of interlimb coordination during walking and their associations to gait deficits in persons with chronic iSCI.
Do deficits in spatial and temporal interlimb coordination correspond differentially to clinical indicators of walking performance in persons with iSCI?
Sixteen persons with chronic iSCI and eleven able-bodied individuals participated in this study. Participants walked at self-selected gait speeds along an instrumented walkway that recorded left and right step lengths and times. We quantified interlimb coordination in terms of normalized differences between left and right step lengths (spatial asymmetry index) and step times (temporal asymmetry index), as well as, gap and phase coordination indices. We then assessed the extent to which these indices independently associated with clinical measures of walking performance.
Participants with iSCI demonstrated greater spatial and temporal asymmetry, as well as, reduced gap and phase interlimb coordination as compared to age-matched controls (p < 0.001). We found no linear relationships between spatial and temporal asymmetry indices (p > 0.05) or between gap and phase coordination indices (p > 0.05). Spatial and temporal asymmetry indices weakly correlated with SCI-FAI composite scores (r = 0.26; p = 0.04). However, only spatial asymmetry indices strongly correlated with slower walking speed (r = 0.51; p < 0.002). We also found participants who used a hand-held assistive device (walker) demonstrated great spatial asymmetry as compared to those who did not (p < 0.03).
Differential impairments in spatial and temporal interlimb coordination correspond to overground walking deficits in persons with chronic iSCI. Spatial asymmetry associated with decreased walking speed and increased reliance on hand-held assistive devices. Gait training methods that target well-defined space and time domains of interlimb coordination may enhance overground gait training in persons with iSCI.
部分由于肢体间协调受损,不完全性脊髓损伤(iSCI)患者恢复社区行走仍然面临重大挑战。在此,我们检查了慢性 iSCI 患者行走过程中肢体间协调的时空特征及其与行走功能障碍的关联。
肢体间协调的时空缺陷是否与 iSCI 患者的行走表现的临床指标存在差异对应?
16 名慢性 iSCI 患者和 11 名对照组参与者参加了这项研究。参与者在配备仪器的步行道上以自我选择的步行速度行走,该步行道记录了左右步长和时间。我们通过左、右步长(空间不对称指数)和步时(时间不对称指数)的归一化差异,以及间隙和相位协调指数,来量化肢体间协调。然后,我们评估了这些指数与行走表现的临床测量指标之间的关联程度。
与年龄匹配的对照组相比,iSCI 患者表现出更大的空间和时间不对称,以及减少的间隙和相位肢体间协调(p<0.001)。我们没有发现空间和时间不对称指数之间(p>0.05)或间隙和相位协调指数之间(p>0.05)存在线性关系。空间和时间不对称指数与 SCI-FAI 综合评分弱相关(r=0.26;p=0.04)。然而,只有空间不对称指数与步行速度较慢强相关(r=0.51;p<0.002)。我们还发现,与不使用手持助行器的参与者相比,使用手持助行器的参与者表现出更大的空间不对称(p<0.03)。
慢性 iSCI 患者肢体间协调的空间和时间缺陷与地面行走缺陷对应。空间不对称与步行速度降低和对手持助行器的依赖增加有关。针对肢体间协调的明确空间和时间领域的步态训练方法可能会增强 iSCI 患者的地面步态训练。