Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, United States of America.
Ralph H. Johnson VA Health Care System, Charleston, SC, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Oct 8;19(10):e0311727. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0311727. eCollection 2024.
Many people with chronic stroke (PwCS) exhibit deficits in step width modulation, an important strategy for walking balance. A single exposure to swing leg perturbations can temporarily strengthen this modulation. The objective of this parallel, double-blinded, randomized controlled trial was to investigate whether repeated perturbations cause sustained increases in step modulation (NCT02964039; funded by the VA). 54 PwCS at the Medical University of South Carolina were randomly assigned to one of three intervention groups: Control (n = 18), with minimal forces; Assistive (n = 18), pushing the swing leg toward a mechanically appropriate location; Perturbing (n = 18), pushing the swing leg away from a mechanically appropriate location. All intervention groups included 24 training sessions over 12-weeks with up to 30-minutes of treadmill walking while interfaced with a novel force-field and a 12-week follow-up period, with five interspersed assessment sessions. Our primary outcome measure was paretic step width modulation, the partial correlation between step width and pelvis displacement (ρSW). Secondarily, we quantified swing and stance leg contributions to step modulation, clinical assessments of walking balance and confidence, and real-world falls. Outcomes were analyzed for participants who completed all assessment sessions (n = 44). Only the Perturbing group exhibited significant increases in paretic ρSW, which were present after 4-weeks of training and sustained through follow-up (t = 2.42-3.17). These changes were due to improved control of paretic swing leg positioning. However, perturbation-induced changes in step modulation were not always significantly greater than those in the Control group, and clinical assessments were similar across intervention groups. Participants in the Perturbing group experienced a lower fall rate than those in the Control group (incidence rate ratio = 0.53), although our small sample size warrants caution. The present results indicate that perturbations can cause sustained modifications of targeted biomechanical characteristics of post-stroke gait, although such changes alone may be insufficient to change more complex clinical assessments.
许多慢性脑卒中患者(PwCS)在步宽调节方面存在缺陷,这是行走平衡的一项重要策略。单次暴露于摆动腿扰动可以暂时增强这种调节。本平行、双盲、随机对照试验的目的是研究重复的扰动是否会导致步幅调节的持续增加(NCT02964039;由 VA 资助)。南卡罗来纳医科大学的 54 名 PwCS 被随机分配到三个干预组之一:对照组(n = 18),施加最小的力;辅助组(n = 18),将摆动腿推向机械上合适的位置;扰动组(n = 18),将摆动腿从机械上合适的位置推开。所有干预组均包括 24 次训练课程,为期 12 周,在跑步机上行走时最多 30 分钟,同时与新型力场接口,并在 12 周的随访期间进行 5 次间歇性评估。我们的主要结果测量指标是患侧步宽调节,步宽与骨盆位移的部分相关(ρSW)。其次,我们量化了摆动和支撑腿对步幅调节的贡献、行走平衡和信心的临床评估以及现实世界中的跌倒。对完成所有评估的参与者(n = 44)进行了结果分析。只有扰动组在患侧 ρSW 显著增加,在训练 4 周后出现,并持续到随访(t = 2.42-3.17)。这些变化是由于对患侧摆动腿位置的控制得到改善。然而,扰动引起的步幅调节变化并不总是明显大于对照组,而且干预组之间的临床评估相似。扰动组的参与者跌倒率低于对照组(发生率比= 0.53),尽管我们的小样本量需要谨慎。目前的结果表明,扰动可以导致脑卒中后步态的目标生物力学特征持续改变,尽管这种改变本身可能不足以改变更复杂的临床评估。