Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, United States of America.
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Jan 2;19(1):e0295993. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0295993. eCollection 2024.
Preferred walking speed is a widely-used performance measure for people with mobility issues, but is usually measured in straight line walking for fixed distances or durations, and without explicitly accounting for turning. However, daily walking involves walking for bouts of different distances and walking with turning, with prior studies showing that short bouts with at most 10 steps could be 40% of all bouts and turning steps could be 8-50% of all steps. Here, we studied walking in a straight line for short distances (4 m to 23 m) and walking in circles (1 m to 3 m turning radii) in people with transtibial amputation or transfemoral amputation using a passive ankle-foot prosthesis (Jaipur Foot). We found that the study participants' preferred walking speeds are lower for shorter straight-line walking distances and lower for circles of smaller radii, which is analogous to earlier results in subjects without amputation. Using inverse optimization, we estimated the cost of changing speeds and turning such that the observed preferred walking speeds in our experiments minimizes the total cost of walking. The inferred costs of changing speeds and turning were larger for subjects with amputation compared to subjects without amputation in a previous study, specifically, being 4x to 8x larger for the turning cost and being highest for subjects with transfemoral amputation. Such high costs inferred by inverse optimization could potentially include non-energetic costs such as due to joint or interfacial stress or stability concerns, as inverse optimization cannot distinguish such terms from true metabolic cost. These experimental findings and models capturing the experimental trends could inform prosthesis design and rehabilitation therapy to better assist changing speeds and turning tasks. Further, measuring the preferred speed for a range of distances and radii could be a more comprehensive subject-specific measure of walking performance than commonly used straight line walking metrics.
首选步行速度是衡量行动不便人群的常用指标,但通常是在固定距离或时间内直线行走测量的,且没有明确考虑转弯。然而,日常步行涉及不同距离的短距离行走和转弯行走,先前的研究表明,最多 10 步的短距离行走可能占所有行走的 40%,转弯步可能占所有步的 8-50%。在这里,我们使用被动踝足假肢(Jaipur 脚)研究了小腿截肢或大腿截肢患者的短距离直线行走(4 米至 23 米)和短距离圆周行走(1 米至 3 米转弯半径)。我们发现,研究参与者的首选步行速度在短直线行走距离较短和转弯半径较小的情况下较低,这与之前无截肢受试者的结果类似。使用逆优化,我们估计了改变速度和转弯的成本,以使我们实验中观察到的首选步行速度最小化行走的总成本。与之前的研究中没有截肢的受试者相比,截肢受试者改变速度和转弯的推断成本更高,具体来说,转弯成本高出 4 到 8 倍,而大腿截肢受试者的转弯成本最高。逆优化推断出的高成本可能包括非能量成本,例如由于关节或界面应力或稳定性问题,因为逆优化无法将这些术语与真实代谢成本区分开来。这些实验发现和捕捉实验趋势的模型可以为假肢设计和康复治疗提供信息,以更好地辅助改变速度和转弯任务。此外,测量一系列距离和半径的首选速度可能比常用的直线行走指标更全面地衡量个体的步行表现。