4.2 Article

Spatiotemporal strategies adopted to walk at fast speed in high- and low-functioning individuals post-stroke: a cross-sectional study

Journal

TOPICS IN STROKE REHABILITATION
Volume 30, Issue 1, Pages 1-10

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10749357.2021.2008593

Keywords

Stroke rehabilitation; mobility limitations; gait analysis; asymmetry; hemiplegia

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This study examined the spatiotemporal gait characteristics of stroke survivors walking at faster-than-preferred speeds. The results showed that compared to high-functioning individuals, low-functioning individuals were limited in modifying gait parameters and these limitations were associated with fear of falling.
Background: Walking at fast speed is a gait training strategy post-stroke. It is unknown how fasterthan-preferred pace impacts spatiotemporal gait characteristics in survivors with different functional abilities. Objective: To test the hypothesis that compared to high-functioning individuals, low-functioning individuals will be limited in modifying spatiotemporal gait parameters for walking at faster-than-preferred speed, and these limitations are associated with fear of falling. Methods: Forty-two adults, 17.6 +/- 14.6 months post-stroke, traversed an instrumented walkway at preferred and fast speeds. Participants were categorized to a low-functioning group (LFG) (n = 20; <0.45 m/s) and high-functioning group (HFG) (n = 22; >= 0.45 m/s). Cadence, step length, stance time and spatiotemporal asymmetry measures were calculated. The Modified Falls-efficacy Scale examined fear of falling. Multivariate and correlational analysis tested hypotheses. Results: Increased speed from preferred to fast pace was significantly greater for HFG (0.27 +/- 0.03 m/s) than LFG (0.10 +/- 0.02 m/s) (p <= 0.001). Cadence gain from preferred to fast pace did not differ between groups. However, HFG exhibited greater change in paretic (Delta 6.1 +/- 1.37 cm; p <.001) and non-paretic step lengths (Delta 4.5 +/- 1.37 cm; p =.003) than LFG. Spatiotemporal asymmetry did not change for either group. Fear of falling had moderately positive correlation with Delta paretic step length (r = 0.43; p =.004) and Delta non-paretic step length (r = 0.32; p =.035). Conclusions: While both low- and high-functioning individuals used a step-lengthening strategy to walk at faster-than-preferred speeds, the gain in step lengths was limited in low-functioning individuals and was partially explained by falls-efficacy.

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