• Arch Phys Med Rehabil · Apr 2012

    Coordination of dynamic balance during gait training in people with acquired brain injury.

    • Ross Allan Clark, Gavin Williams, Natalie Fini, Liz Moore, and Adam Leigh Bryant.
    • Department of Physiotherapy, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia. raclark@unimelb.edu.au
    • Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2012 Apr 1; 93 (4): 636-40.

    ObjectiveTo investigate movement of the center of mass (COM) during different gait training methods in people with neurologic conditions.DesignCoordination of the gait cycle, represented by mediolateral COM displacement amplitude, timing, and stability, was assessed during a variety of gait training methods performed in a single session.SettingGait laboratory.ParticipantsPeople who were unable to walk unassisted due to an acquired brain injury (n=17) and healthy control subjects (n=25).InterventionsThe participants performed 7 alternative gait training methods in a randomized order. These were therapist manual facilitation, the use of a gait assistive device, treadmill walking with handrail support, and 4 variations of body weight-support treadmill training with combinations of handrail and/or therapist support.Main Outcome MeasuresMediolateral COM movement was analyzed in terms of displacement amplitude (overall range of motion), timing (relative to stride time), and stability (steadiness of the movement). Normative values for these measures were acquired from 25 healthy participants walking at a self-selected comfortable pace.ResultsBody weight-support treadmill training without any additional support resulted in significantly (P<.05) greater amplitude, altered timing, and reduced movement stability compared with nonpathologic gait. Allowing handrail support or therapist facilitation reduced this effect and resulted in treadmill training (± body weight support) having lower movement amplitudes when compared with the other training methods. Therapist manual facilitation most closely matched nonpathologic gait for timing and stability.ConclusionsIn the context of overall dynamic gait coordination, no single method of training provides the optimal stimulus. A training program that uses a variety of techniques may provide a beneficial rehabilitation response.Copyright © 2012 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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