University College London, Division of Surgery & Interventional Science, Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital, Brockley Hill, Stanmore, HA7 4LP, UK.
Department of Health & Kinesiology, University of Utah, 250 S 1850 E, Salt Lake City, UT, 84112, USA.
BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2021 Jun 28;22(1):597. doi: 10.1186/s12891-021-04466-4.
The Margin of Stability (MoS) is a widely used objective measure of dynamic stability during gait. Increasingly, researchers are using the MoS to assess the stability of pathological populations to gauge their stability capabilities and coping strategies, or as an objective marker of outcome, response to treatment or disease progression. The objectives are; to describe the types of pathological gait that are assessed using the MoS, to examine the methods used to assess MoS and to examine the way the MoS data is presented and interpreted.
A systematic review was conducted in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Guidelines (PRISMA) in the following databases: Web of Science, PubMed, UCL Library Explore, Cochrane Library, Scopus. All articles measured the MoS of a pathologically affected adult human population whilst walking in a straight line. Extracted data were collected per a prospectively defined list, which included: population type, method of data analysis and model building, walking tasks undertaken, and interpretation of the MoS.
Thirty-one studies were included in the final review. More than 15 different clinical populations were studied, most commonly post-stroke and unilateral transtibial amputee populations. Most participants were assessed in a gait laboratory using motion capture technology, whilst 2 studies used instrumented shoes. A variety of centre of mass, base of support and MoS definitions and calculations were described.
This is the first systematic review to assess use of the MoS and the first to consider its clinical application. Findings suggest the MoS has potential to be a helpful, objective measurement in a variety of clinically affected populations. Unfortunately, the methodology and interpretation varies, which hinders subsequent study comparisons. A lack of baseline results from large studies mean direct comparison between studies is difficult and strong conclusions are hard to make. Further work from the biomechanics community to develop reporting guidelines for MoS calculation methodology and a commitment to larger baseline studies for each pathology is welcomed.
稳定裕度(MoS)是一种广泛用于评估步态动态稳定性的客观指标。越来越多的研究人员使用 MoS 来评估病理性人群的稳定性,以评估他们的稳定性能力和应对策略,或作为客观的预后标志物、治疗反应或疾病进展的指标。本研究旨在描述使用 MoS 评估的病理性步态类型,检查评估 MoS 的方法,并探讨 MoS 数据的呈现和解释方式。
根据系统评价和荟萃分析首选报告项目(PRISMA)的指南,在以下数据库中进行了系统评价:Web of Science、PubMed、UCL 图书馆探索、Cochrane 图书馆、Scopus。所有文章均测量了病理性成人人群在直线行走时的 MoS。根据预先确定的清单提取数据,包括:人群类型、数据分析和建模方法、进行的行走任务以及 MoS 的解释。
最终的综述共纳入了 31 项研究。研究对象主要为脑卒中后和单侧小腿截肢患者,涉及 15 种以上不同的临床人群。大多数参与者在步态实验室中使用运动捕捉技术进行评估,有 2 项研究使用了仪器化鞋。描述了各种质心、支撑基础和 MoS 的定义和计算方法。
这是第一项评估 MoS 使用情况并首次考虑其临床应用的系统评价。研究结果表明,MoS 有可能成为各种临床受影响人群的有用的客观测量指标。不幸的是,方法和解释存在差异,这阻碍了后续研究的比较。由于缺乏来自大型研究的基线结果,因此很难在研究之间进行直接比较,也很难得出明确的结论。欢迎生物力学界进一步制定 MoS 计算方法学的报告指南,并承诺为每个病理开展更大的基线研究。