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Evaluation of Gait Variable Change over Time as Transtibial Amputees Adapt to a New Prosthesis Foot

A variety of prescribed accommodation periods have been used in published prosthesis intervention studies that have examined biomechanical outcomes. Few investigators included repeated measurements in their study design, leaving questions as to how measured outcomes change as amputees acclimate to a...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Xueyi, Fiedler, Goeran, Liu, Zhicheng
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6545810/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31236415
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/9252368
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author Zhang, Xueyi
Fiedler, Goeran
Liu, Zhicheng
author_facet Zhang, Xueyi
Fiedler, Goeran
Liu, Zhicheng
author_sort Zhang, Xueyi
collection PubMed
description A variety of prescribed accommodation periods have been used in published prosthesis intervention studies that have examined biomechanical outcomes. Few investigators included repeated measurements in their study design, leaving questions as to how measured outcomes change as amputees acclimate to a new prosthesis. This paper is the product of our investigation as to whether measured gait variables were affected by the duration of accommodation period, and to assess the relationship between measured outcomes and the subjective perception of the participants. A sample of transtibial amputees were recruited for this study. Gait data was collected by wearable sensor repeatedly, starting immediately after fitting the interventional foot and extending over a subsequent four days. Participants indicated their perceived accommodation quality on a visual analog scale (VAS). A total of twelve commonly used spatiotemporal gait parameters were analyzed. Friedman tests were used to determine overall differences across time points in both early (one hour) and late (day two through five) accommodation phases, for each gait variable. Statistically significant changes across the early phase were found for variables gait speed χ(2)(2)=8.000, p=0.018, cadence χ(2)(2)=7.185, p=0.028, and double support time on the sound side χ(2)(2)=8.615, p=0.013. Across days two through five, no gait variable significantly changed. VAS scores correlated strongly with step count (r=1.000, p<0.001) and cadence (r=0.857, p=0.014). Longer accommodation periods resulted in less deviations of gait variables for the clinical assessment in the process of prosthetic rehabilitation. Trying out prosthetic interventions for less than one hour has yielded unreliable outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-65458102019-06-24 Evaluation of Gait Variable Change over Time as Transtibial Amputees Adapt to a New Prosthesis Foot Zhang, Xueyi Fiedler, Goeran Liu, Zhicheng Biomed Res Int Research Article A variety of prescribed accommodation periods have been used in published prosthesis intervention studies that have examined biomechanical outcomes. Few investigators included repeated measurements in their study design, leaving questions as to how measured outcomes change as amputees acclimate to a new prosthesis. This paper is the product of our investigation as to whether measured gait variables were affected by the duration of accommodation period, and to assess the relationship between measured outcomes and the subjective perception of the participants. A sample of transtibial amputees were recruited for this study. Gait data was collected by wearable sensor repeatedly, starting immediately after fitting the interventional foot and extending over a subsequent four days. Participants indicated their perceived accommodation quality on a visual analog scale (VAS). A total of twelve commonly used spatiotemporal gait parameters were analyzed. Friedman tests were used to determine overall differences across time points in both early (one hour) and late (day two through five) accommodation phases, for each gait variable. Statistically significant changes across the early phase were found for variables gait speed χ(2)(2)=8.000, p=0.018, cadence χ(2)(2)=7.185, p=0.028, and double support time on the sound side χ(2)(2)=8.615, p=0.013. Across days two through five, no gait variable significantly changed. VAS scores correlated strongly with step count (r=1.000, p<0.001) and cadence (r=0.857, p=0.014). Longer accommodation periods resulted in less deviations of gait variables for the clinical assessment in the process of prosthetic rehabilitation. Trying out prosthetic interventions for less than one hour has yielded unreliable outcomes. Hindawi 2019-05-20 /pmc/articles/PMC6545810/ /pubmed/31236415 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/9252368 Text en Copyright © 2019 Xueyi Zhang et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Zhang, Xueyi
Fiedler, Goeran
Liu, Zhicheng
Evaluation of Gait Variable Change over Time as Transtibial Amputees Adapt to a New Prosthesis Foot
title Evaluation of Gait Variable Change over Time as Transtibial Amputees Adapt to a New Prosthesis Foot
title_full Evaluation of Gait Variable Change over Time as Transtibial Amputees Adapt to a New Prosthesis Foot
title_fullStr Evaluation of Gait Variable Change over Time as Transtibial Amputees Adapt to a New Prosthesis Foot
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Gait Variable Change over Time as Transtibial Amputees Adapt to a New Prosthesis Foot
title_short Evaluation of Gait Variable Change over Time as Transtibial Amputees Adapt to a New Prosthesis Foot
title_sort evaluation of gait variable change over time as transtibial amputees adapt to a new prosthesis foot
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6545810/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31236415
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/9252368
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