Alhuzaymi A, Fiedler G
Department of Physical Therapy, Majmaah University, Saudi Arabia.
Department of Rehabilitation Science and Technology, University of Pittsburgh, USA.
Can Prosthet Orthot J. 2025 Aug 21;8(1):45517. doi: 10.33137/cpoj.v8i1.45517. eCollection 2025.
Increasing balance and stability, along with efficient locomotion, is a high-priority goal of physical rehabilitation after limb loss in order to facilitate effective participation in society. Research in the general population suggests that the ability to walk fast is correlated to good performance in balance tests. However, it is unclear if and how prosthesis use influences this correlation.
Our small-sample pilot study aimed to explore whether the general relationship between walking speed and balance holds true for people with limb loss whose physical capabilities are inevitably influenced by their prosthetic devices.
Participants with any level of limb loss were recruited and asked to perform the Ten-Meter Walk Test and Narrowing Beam Walking Test. Scores in both tests were analyzed using Spearman's rank correlation coefficient.
The initial sample of eleven participants was reduced to eight (5 males, 3 females, mean age 52 years, mean height 171 cm, mean weight 68 kg, mean BMI 23, limb loss levels ranging from partial hand to trans-femoral amputation) after removing outliers. The mean Ten-Meter Walking velocity was 1.16 m/s, and the mean Narrowing Beam Test score was 11.38. The results indicate a medium to strong correlation between fast walking speed and high balance scores (ρ = 0.681, p = 0.063) when outliers are excluded.
These findings are consistent with prior research conducted in other populations. However, outliers in our data suggest that this relationship is not universal across all individuals with limb loss. Possible confounding variables include the activity level and the respectively prescribed prosthetic technology. Our finding, that gait speed and balance scores should be evaluated separately to tailor rehabilitation strategies effectively, is preliminary and needs to be confirmed in a larger study.
提高平衡能力和稳定性以及实现高效移动,是肢体缺失后身体康复的一项高度优先目标,以便促进有效融入社会。针对普通人群的研究表明,快走能力与平衡测试中的良好表现相关。然而,尚不清楚使用假肢是否以及如何影响这种相关性。
我们的小样本试点研究旨在探讨步行速度与平衡之间的一般关系对于肢体缺失患者是否成立,这些患者的身体能力不可避免地受到其假肢装置的影响。
招募了不同肢体缺失程度的参与者,并要求他们进行十米步行测试和窄梁行走测试。使用斯皮尔曼等级相关系数分析两项测试的得分。
在剔除异常值后,最初的11名参与者样本减少到8名(5名男性,3名女性,平均年龄52岁,平均身高171厘米,平均体重68千克,平均BMI为23,肢体缺失程度从部分手部缺失到经股骨截肢)。十米步行的平均速度为1.16米/秒,窄梁测试的平均得分为11.38。结果表明,排除异常值后,快走速度与高平衡得分之间存在中等至强相关性(ρ = 0.681,p = 0.063)。
这些发现与之前在其他人群中进行的研究一致。然而,我们数据中的异常值表明,这种关系并非在所有肢体缺失个体中普遍存在。可能的混杂变量包括活动水平和相应规定的假肢技术。我们的发现,即应分别评估步态速度和平衡得分以有效制定康复策略,是初步的,需要在更大规模的研究中得到证实。