This study aimed to analyze the biomechanical consequences of reducing the base of support in patients with ataxia. Specifically, we evaluated the spatio-temporal parameters, upper- and lower-body kinematics, muscle co-activation, and energy recovery and expenditure. The gaits of 13 patients were recorded using a motion analysis system in unperturbed and perturbed walking conditions. In the latter condition, patients had to walk using the same step width and speed of healthy controls. The perturbed walking condition featured reduced gait speed, step length, hip and knee range of motion, and energy recovery and increased double support duration, gait variability, trunk oscillation, and ankle joint muscle co-activation. Narrowing the base of support increased gait instability (e.g., gait variability and trunk oscillations) and induced patients to further use alternative compensatory mechanisms to maintain dynamic balance at the expense of a reduced ability to recover mechanical energy. A widened step width gait is a global strategy employed by patients to increase dynamic stability, reduce the need for further compensatory mechanisms, and thus recover mechanical energy. Our findings suggest that rehabilitative treatment should more specifically focus on step width training.

Effect of restraining the base of support on the other biomechanical features in patients with cerebellar ataxia / Conte, C; Serrao, Mariano; Cuius, L; Ranavolo, A; Conforto, S; Pierelli, F; Padua, L.. - In: THE CEREBELLUM. - ISSN 1473-4222. - ELETTRONICO. - 17:3(2018), pp. 264-275. [10.1007/s12311-017-0897-y]

Effect of restraining the base of support on the other biomechanical features in patients with cerebellar ataxia

Serrao, Mariano
Conceptualization
;
Ranavolo, A
Methodology
;
Conforto, S
Supervision
;
Pierelli, F
Supervision
;
2018

Abstract

This study aimed to analyze the biomechanical consequences of reducing the base of support in patients with ataxia. Specifically, we evaluated the spatio-temporal parameters, upper- and lower-body kinematics, muscle co-activation, and energy recovery and expenditure. The gaits of 13 patients were recorded using a motion analysis system in unperturbed and perturbed walking conditions. In the latter condition, patients had to walk using the same step width and speed of healthy controls. The perturbed walking condition featured reduced gait speed, step length, hip and knee range of motion, and energy recovery and increased double support duration, gait variability, trunk oscillation, and ankle joint muscle co-activation. Narrowing the base of support increased gait instability (e.g., gait variability and trunk oscillations) and induced patients to further use alternative compensatory mechanisms to maintain dynamic balance at the expense of a reduced ability to recover mechanical energy. A widened step width gait is a global strategy employed by patients to increase dynamic stability, reduce the need for further compensatory mechanisms, and thus recover mechanical energy. Our findings suggest that rehabilitative treatment should more specifically focus on step width training.
2018
cerebellar ataxia; perturbed gait; restrained base of support; step width; widened base of support
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Effect of restraining the base of support on the other biomechanical features in patients with cerebellar ataxia / Conte, C; Serrao, Mariano; Cuius, L; Ranavolo, A; Conforto, S; Pierelli, F; Padua, L.. - In: THE CEREBELLUM. - ISSN 1473-4222. - ELETTRONICO. - 17:3(2018), pp. 264-275. [10.1007/s12311-017-0897-y]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1022518
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