4.5 Article

Combining muscle morphology and neuromotor symptoms to explain abnormal gait at the ankle joint level in cerebral palsy

Journal

GAIT & POSTURE
Volume 68, Issue -, Pages 531-537

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2018.12.002

Keywords

Spastic cerebral palsy; Muscle volume; Echo-intensity; Three-dimensional freehand ultrasonography; Three-dimensional gait analysis

Funding

  1. Doctoral Scholarships Committee for International Collaboration with non EER-countries (DBOF), KU Leuven [DBOF/12/058]
  2. Flemish Research Foundation (FWO), TAMTA [T005416N]
  3. La Fondation Motrice [2016/8]
  4. Flemish Research Foundation (FWO) [12R4215N]
  5. European Commission under P7-ICT-2011-9 program [600932]

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Background: Individuals with spastic cerebral palsy (CP) have neuromotor symptoms contributing towards their gait patterns. However, the role of altered muscle morphology alongside these symptoms is yet to be fully investigated. Research question: To what extent can medial gastrocnemius and tibialis anterior volume and echo-intensity, plantar/dorsiflexion strength and selective motor control, plantarflexion spasticity and passive ankle dorsiflexion explain abnormal ankle gait. Method: In thirty children and adolescents with spastic CP (8.6 +/- 3.4 y/mo) and ten typically developing peers (9.9 +/- 2.4 y/mo), normalised muscle volume and echo-intensity were estimated. Both cohorts also underwent three-dimensional gait analysis, whilst for participants with spastic CP, plantar/dorsi-flexion strength and selective motor control, plantarflexion spasticity and maximum ankle dorsiflexion were also measured. The combined contribution of these parameters towards five clinically meaningful features of gait were evaluated, using backwards multiple regression analyses. Results: With respect to the typically developing cohort, the participants with spastic CP had deficits in normalised medial gastrocnemius and tibialis anterior volume of 40% and 33%, and increased echo-intensity values of 19% and 16%, respectively. The backwards multiple regression analyses revealed that the combination of reduced ankle dorsiflexion, muscle volume, plantarflexion strength and dorsiflexion selective motor control could account for 12-62% of the variance in the chosen features of gait. Significance: The combination of altered muscle morphology and neuromotor symptoms partly explained abnormal gait at the ankle in children with spastic CP. Both should be considered as important measures for informed treatment decision-making, but further work is required to better unravel the complex pathophysiology.

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