4.5 Article

The effects of direction and speed on treadmill walking in typically developing children

期刊

GAIT & POSTURE
卷 84, 期 -, 页码 169-174

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ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2020.11.028

关键词

Kinematic; Kinetic; Electromyography; Spatiotemporal; Gait

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The study found that typically developing children adapt their gait to changes in direction and speed of treadmill walking in ways similar to adults, but with notable differences in ankle range of motion.
Background: Backward walking and fast walking have distinctive gait patterns in adults; however, there is minimal literature describing these gait modifications in typically developing children. Additionally, most of previous research focused on overground backward walking, but not on a treadmill. Research question: How do typically developing children adapt their gait patterns, including spatiotemporal parameters, joint kinematics, and muscle activation, to changes in direction and speed during treadmill walking? Methods: We recruited 19 children (10 M/9 F) aged 6-12 years. Treadmill conditions included forward and backward walking at three speeds: slow (75 % of normal speed), normal speed, and fast (125 % of normal speed). Subjects completed a 2-minute trial under each condition. Spatiotemporal, kinematic, kinetic and electromyography data were collected and analyzed. Correlations between forward and time-reversed backward walking were calculated for joint angles and vertical ground reaction force. Results: During backward walking, children (a) decreased step lengths and increased step widths and foot clearance, (b) decreased peak hip and knee flexion and increased peak ankle dorsiflexion, and (c) increased muscle activity at the vastus lateralis, rectus femoris, and tibialis anterior. At faster speeds, children increased step lengths and inconsistently increased overall muscle activity. Both the hip and knee showed high correlation between forward and time-reversed backward walking, while correlation at the ankle was low. Significance: Overall, children adapt their gait to changes in direction and speed of treadmill walking in similar ways to adults. However, notable differences emerged in that children limited their ankle range of motion. Our results suggest that, while many aspects of gait are mature enough by this age to adapt to backward walking on a treadmill, neuromuscular control at the ankle may still be lacking in children while walking backward on a treadmill.

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