Source
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan. khase@sc.itc.keio.ac.jp
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To examine the short-term effects of a newly developed hemiparetic gait training in which patients walk with a prosthesis applied to the nonparetic leg in the flexed knee position.
DESIGN:
Pre-post nonrandomized controlled trial.
SETTING:
Rehabilitation center and gait laboratory of a university hospital.
PARTICIPANTS:
Community-dwelling ambulatory volunteers (N=22) with chronic hemiparesis caused by a unilateral stroke.
INTERVENTION:
Study subjects participated in a gait training program using either a below-knee prosthesis or a treadmill. Treadmill gait training was performed at a speed approximating the maximum gait velocity for each patient. The 3-week program consisted of a 5-minute gait training session 2 to 3 times a day.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:
The ground reaction forces, stance time, step length and cadence during walking at a comfortable speed, and maximum gait speed, as well as the Berg Balance Score, were estimated before and after each training program.
RESULTS:
In comparison with changes after the treadmill gait training, analyses of covariance demonstrated a significant increase of the fore-aft ground reaction forces during the paretic propulsion phase and a significant increase in the relative durations of the paretic and nonparetic single stance involved in a gait cycle after the prosthetic gait training (P<.05).
CONCLUSIONS:
Prosthetic gait training would have different effects on a hemiparetic gait than treadmill gait training. The gait-related task inducing the dominant use of the paretic leg to support the body may be useful as a rehabilitative treatment to improve the kinetic abilities in the paretic stance period.
Copyright © 2011 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.