Treadmill walking with partial body weight support versus floor walking in hemiparetic subjects
- PMID: 10206604
- DOI: 10.1016/s0003-9993(99)90279-4
Treadmill walking with partial body weight support versus floor walking in hemiparetic subjects
Abstract
Objective: To compare the gait of hemiparetic subjects walking on a treadmill with various body weight supports and walking on the floor.
Design: Hemiparetic subjects walked on a treadmill, secured in a harness, with no body weight support and with 15% and 30% body weight relief, and walked on a floor.
Setting: Kinematic laboratory of a department of rehabilitation.
Subjects: Eighteen hemiparetic stroke patients.
Main outcome measures: Gait cycle parameters and kinesiologic electromyogram of six muscles of the affected side and of two muscles of the nonaffected side.
Results: On the treadmill, patients walked more slowly because of a reduced cadence, with a longer single stance period of the paretic limb, more symmetrically, and with a larger hip extension (multivariate profile analysis, p<.05). The mean functional activities of the gastrocnemius muscle and of the first crest of the erector spinae of the paretic side were smaller on the treadmill (univariate test, p<.05). Further, the premature activity of the gastrocnemius muscle, indicating spasticity, was less on the treadmill (univariate test, p<.05); correspondingly the qualitative muscle pattern analysis revealed less co-contraction between the gastrocnemius and tibialis anterior muscles in 11 of the 18 subjects.
Conclusions: Treadmill training with partial body weight support in hemiparetic subjects allows them to practice a favorable gait characterized by a greater stimulus for balance training because of the prolonged single stance period of the affected limb, a higher symmetry, less plantar flexor spasticity, and a more regular activation pattern of the shank muscles as compared with floor walking.
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