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Uneven terrain treadmill walking in younger and older adults

We developed a method for altering terrain unevenness on a treadmill to study gait kinematics. Terrain consisted of rigid polyurethane disks (12.7 cm diameter, 1.3–3.8 cm tall) which attached to the treadmill belt using hook-and-loop fasteners. Here, we tested four terrain unevenness conditions: Fla...

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Autores principales: Downey, Ryan J., Richer, Natalie, Gupta, Rohan, Liu, Chang, Pliner, Erika M., Roy, Arkaprava, Hwang, Jungyun, Clark, David J., Hass, Chris J., Manini, Todd M., Seidler, Rachael D., Ferris, Daniel P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9762558/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36534645
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0278646
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author Downey, Ryan J.
Richer, Natalie
Gupta, Rohan
Liu, Chang
Pliner, Erika M.
Roy, Arkaprava
Hwang, Jungyun
Clark, David J.
Hass, Chris J.
Manini, Todd M.
Seidler, Rachael D.
Ferris, Daniel P.
author_facet Downey, Ryan J.
Richer, Natalie
Gupta, Rohan
Liu, Chang
Pliner, Erika M.
Roy, Arkaprava
Hwang, Jungyun
Clark, David J.
Hass, Chris J.
Manini, Todd M.
Seidler, Rachael D.
Ferris, Daniel P.
author_sort Downey, Ryan J.
collection PubMed
description We developed a method for altering terrain unevenness on a treadmill to study gait kinematics. Terrain consisted of rigid polyurethane disks (12.7 cm diameter, 1.3–3.8 cm tall) which attached to the treadmill belt using hook-and-loop fasteners. Here, we tested four terrain unevenness conditions: Flat, Low, Medium, and High. The main objective was to test the hypothesis that increasing the unevenness of the terrain would result in greater gait kinematic variability. Seventeen younger adults (age 20–40 years), 25 higher-functioning older adults (age 65+ years), and 29 lower-functioning older adults (age 65+ years, Short Physical Performance Battery score < 10) participated. We customized the treadmill speed to each participant’s walking ability, keeping the speed constant across all four terrain conditions. Participants completed two 3-minute walking trials per condition. Using an inertial measurement unit placed over the sacrum and pressure sensors in the shoes, we calculated the stride-to-stride variability in step duration and sacral excursion (coefficient of variation; standard deviation expressed as percentage of the mean). Participants also self-reported their perceived stability for each condition. Terrain was a significant predictor of step duration variability, which roughly doubled from Flat to High terrain for all participant groups: younger adults (Flat 4.0%, High 8.2%), higher-functioning older adults (Flat 5.0%, High 8.9%), lower-functioning older adults (Flat 7.0%, High 14.1%). Similarly, all groups exhibited significant increases in sacral excursion variability for the Medium and High uneven terrain conditions, compared to Flat. Participants were also significantly more likely to report feeling less stable walking over all three uneven terrain conditions compared to Flat. These findings support the hypothesis that altering terrain unevenness on a treadmill will increase gait kinematic variability and reduce perceived stability in younger and older adults.
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spelling pubmed-97625582022-12-20 Uneven terrain treadmill walking in younger and older adults Downey, Ryan J. Richer, Natalie Gupta, Rohan Liu, Chang Pliner, Erika M. Roy, Arkaprava Hwang, Jungyun Clark, David J. Hass, Chris J. Manini, Todd M. Seidler, Rachael D. Ferris, Daniel P. PLoS One Research Article We developed a method for altering terrain unevenness on a treadmill to study gait kinematics. Terrain consisted of rigid polyurethane disks (12.7 cm diameter, 1.3–3.8 cm tall) which attached to the treadmill belt using hook-and-loop fasteners. Here, we tested four terrain unevenness conditions: Flat, Low, Medium, and High. The main objective was to test the hypothesis that increasing the unevenness of the terrain would result in greater gait kinematic variability. Seventeen younger adults (age 20–40 years), 25 higher-functioning older adults (age 65+ years), and 29 lower-functioning older adults (age 65+ years, Short Physical Performance Battery score < 10) participated. We customized the treadmill speed to each participant’s walking ability, keeping the speed constant across all four terrain conditions. Participants completed two 3-minute walking trials per condition. Using an inertial measurement unit placed over the sacrum and pressure sensors in the shoes, we calculated the stride-to-stride variability in step duration and sacral excursion (coefficient of variation; standard deviation expressed as percentage of the mean). Participants also self-reported their perceived stability for each condition. Terrain was a significant predictor of step duration variability, which roughly doubled from Flat to High terrain for all participant groups: younger adults (Flat 4.0%, High 8.2%), higher-functioning older adults (Flat 5.0%, High 8.9%), lower-functioning older adults (Flat 7.0%, High 14.1%). Similarly, all groups exhibited significant increases in sacral excursion variability for the Medium and High uneven terrain conditions, compared to Flat. Participants were also significantly more likely to report feeling less stable walking over all three uneven terrain conditions compared to Flat. These findings support the hypothesis that altering terrain unevenness on a treadmill will increase gait kinematic variability and reduce perceived stability in younger and older adults. Public Library of Science 2022-12-19 /pmc/articles/PMC9762558/ /pubmed/36534645 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0278646 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Downey, Ryan J.
Richer, Natalie
Gupta, Rohan
Liu, Chang
Pliner, Erika M.
Roy, Arkaprava
Hwang, Jungyun
Clark, David J.
Hass, Chris J.
Manini, Todd M.
Seidler, Rachael D.
Ferris, Daniel P.
Uneven terrain treadmill walking in younger and older adults
title Uneven terrain treadmill walking in younger and older adults
title_full Uneven terrain treadmill walking in younger and older adults
title_fullStr Uneven terrain treadmill walking in younger and older adults
title_full_unstemmed Uneven terrain treadmill walking in younger and older adults
title_short Uneven terrain treadmill walking in younger and older adults
title_sort uneven terrain treadmill walking in younger and older adults
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9762558/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36534645
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0278646
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