4.2 Article

Comparison of the Immediate Effects of Audio, Visual, or Audiovisual Gait Biofeedback on Propulsive Force Generation in Able-Bodied and Post-stroke Individuals

Journal

APPLIED PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY AND BIOFEEDBACK
Volume 45, Issue 3, Pages 211-220

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10484-020-09464-1

Keywords

Biofeedback; Gait biomechanics; Post-stroke hemiparesis; Gait training; Paretic propulsion

Funding

  1. National Institute of Child Health and Human Developement [K01 HD079584, R21 HD095138, U10NS086607, U01 NS091951]

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Real-time biofeedback is a promising post-stroke gait rehabilitation strategy that can target specific gait deficits preferentially in the paretic leg. Our previous work demonstrated that the use of an audiovisual biofeedback interface designed to increase paretic leg propulsion, measured via anterior ground reaction force (AGRF) generation during late stance phase of gait, can induce improvements in peak AGRF production of the targeted and paretic limb of able-bodied and post-stroke individuals, respectively. However, whether different modes of biofeedback, such as visual, auditory, or a combination of both, have differential effects on AGRF generation is unknown. The present study investigated the effects of audio only, visual only, or audiovisual AGRF biofeedback in able-bodied and post-stroke individuals. Seven able-bodied (6 females, 27 +/- 2 years) and nine post-stroke individuals (6 females, 54 +/- 12 years, 42 +/- 26 months post-stroke) completed four 30-s walking trials on a treadmill under 4 conditions: no biofeedback, audio biofeedback, visual biofeedback, or audiovisual biofeedback. Compared to walking without biofeedback, all three biofeedback modes significantly increased peak AGRF in the targeted and paretic leg. There was no significant difference in peak AGRF between the three biofeedback modes. Able-bodied individuals demonstrated greater feedback-induced increase in stride-to-stride variation of AGRF generation during audio biofeedback compared to visual biofeedback; however, similar results were not observed in the post-stroke group. The present findings may inform future development of real-time gait biofeedback interfaces for use in clinical or community environments.

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