Castillo Fernando, Yates Charlotte, Eskola Kimberly, Williams David K, Lowe Leah
Doctor of Physical Therapy University of St Augustine for Health Sciences.
Doctor of Physical Therapy University of Central Arkansas.
Int J Sports Phys Ther. 2025 Apr 2;20(4):514-521. doi: 10.26603/001c.133493. eCollection 2025.
It is unknown if differences exist for normalized velocity (m/s) and step length (m) when measured using clinically accessible tools, such as the 10-Meter Walk Test (10MWT) and a timed gait analysis (TGA), and costly equipment, such as the GAITRite® electronic walkway system, in healthy adolescent athletes.
The purpose of this study was to compare normalized velocity and step length data using low- and high-tech equipment during single- and dual-task gait. The investigators hypothesized that there would be no significant differences between data collected using the 10MWT, TGA, and GAITRite®.
Cross-sectional, repeated-measures study design.
A convenience sample of healthy male (n=23) and female (n=20) adolescent athletes aged 14-18 years were recruited from a local high school. A three-way mixed analysis of variance analyzed normalized velocity (m/s) and step length (m) data measured with the 10MWT, TGA, and GAITRite® while participants walked at a self-selected speed with and without a visuospatial cognitive task. All data were collected in the participants' school setting. A three-way mixed ANOVA was used to analyze data.
No significant interactions between assessment tool, walk condition, or sex were found. A main effect of walk condition (p<0.0001) and sex (p<0.0004) was found for normalized velocity (i.e., females walked faster than males). Normalized velocity was also significantly decreased when measured with the 10MWT compared to the GAITRite® (p<0.007) and the TGA (p<0.03).
Normalized velocity may be generalizable between the TGA and GAITRite®, but not the 10MWT. Therefore, the TGA may be a viable adjunct to current multimodal assessments of gait following concussion in the absence of costly equipment.
Level 2.
在健康青少年运动员中,使用临床可及工具(如10米步行测试(10MWT)和定时步态分析(TGA))以及昂贵设备(如GAITRite®电子步道系统)测量标准化速度(米/秒)和步长(米)时,是否存在差异尚不清楚。
本研究的目的是比较在单任务和双任务步态期间使用低技术和高技术设备的标准化速度和步长数据。研究人员假设,使用10MWT、TGA和GAITRite®收集的数据之间不会有显著差异。
横断面重复测量研究设计。
从当地一所高中招募了23名健康男性和20名健康女性青少年运动员作为便利样本,年龄在14 - 18岁之间。采用三因素混合方差分析来分析在参与者以自选速度行走且有和没有视觉空间认知任务的情况下,使用10MWT、TGA和GAITRite®测量的标准化速度(米/秒)和步长(米)数据。所有数据均在参与者的学校环境中收集。使用三因素混合方差分析来分析数据。
未发现评估工具、行走条件或性别之间存在显著交互作用。发现行走条件(p < 0.0001)和性别(p < 0.0004)对标准化速度有主效应(即女性比男性走得快)。与GAITRite®(p < 0.007)和TGA(p < 0.03)相比,使用10MWT测量时标准化速度也显著降低。
标准化速度在TGA和GAITRite®之间可能具有通用性,但在10MWT中并非如此。因此,在没有昂贵设备的情况下,TGA可能是当前脑震荡后步态多模式评估的可行辅助手段。
2级。