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. 2010 Aug;41(8):1704-8.
doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.110.589473. Epub 2010 Jun 24.

Perception of weight-bearing distribution during sit-to-stand tasks in hemiparetic and healthy individuals

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Perception of weight-bearing distribution during sit-to-stand tasks in hemiparetic and healthy individuals

Anabèle Brière et al. Stroke. 2010 Aug.

Abstract

Background and purpose: It is unknown whether hemiparetic individuals are aware of their weight-bearing asymmetry during sit-to-stand tasks. This study compared the error between hemiparetic and healthy individuals' perception of weight-bearing and their actual weight-bearing distribution during the sit-to-stand task and analyzed the association between the knee extensor muscle strength and the weight-bearing distribution and perception.

Methods: Nineteen unilateral hemiparetic subjects and 15 healthy individuals participated in the study. They performed the sit-to-stand transfer on force platforms under different foot placements (spontaneous and symmetrical) and had to rate their perceived weight-bearing distribution at the lower limbs on a visual analog scale. The strength of the knee extensors was assessed with a Biodex dynamometer.

Results: The hemiparetic individuals presented greater weight-bearing asymmetry and errors of perception than the healthy individuals. Although no significant association was found between strength and weight-bearing perception, moderate associations were found between strength and weight-bearing distribution for both the spontaneous (r=0.75, P<0.01) and symmetrical (r=0.71, P<0.01) foot position conditions.

Conclusions: This study revealed that individuals with hemiparesis after a stroke do not perceive themselves as asymmetrical when executing the sit-to-stand transfer and that the knee extensor strength is a factor linked to their weight-bearing asymmetry, not to their perception.

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