Changing stroke rehab and research worldwide now.Time is Brain! trillions and trillions of neurons that DIE each day because there are NO effective hyperacute therapies besides tPA(only 12% effective). I have 523 posts on hyperacute therapy, enough for researchers to spend decades proving them out. These are my personal ideas and blog on stroke rehabilitation and stroke research. Do not attempt any of these without checking with your medical provider. Unless you join me in agitating, when you need these therapies they won't be there.

What this blog is for:

My blog is not to help survivors recover, it is to have the 10 million yearly stroke survivors light fires underneath their doctors, stroke hospitals and stroke researchers to get stroke solved. 100% recovery. The stroke medical world is completely failing at that goal, they don't even have it as a goal. Shortly after getting out of the hospital and getting NO information on the process or protocols of stroke rehabilitation and recovery I started searching on the internet and found that no other survivor received useful information. This is an attempt to cover all stroke rehabilitation information that should be readily available to survivors so they can talk with informed knowledge to their medical staff. It lays out what needs to be done to get stroke survivors closer to 100% recovery. It's quite disgusting that this information is not available from every stroke association and doctors group.

Showing posts with label gait kinematics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gait kinematics. Show all posts

Thursday, February 23, 2023

Bilateral ankle deformities affects gait kinematics in chronic stroke patients

Useless. You described how to identify a problem but DID NOTHING to solve it.

Hope you're OK with that when you are the 1 in 4 per WHO that has a stroke, you'll want full recovery, this doesn't get you there.

Bilateral ankle deformities affects gait kinematics in chronic stroke patients

  • 1Department of Clinical Rehabilitation Research, National Rehabilitation Center, Seoul, Republic of Korea
  • 2Translational Research Center on Rehabilitation Robots, National Rehabilitation Center, Seoul, Republic of Korea
  • 3Department of Applied Statistics, Chung-Ang University, Seoul, Republic of Korea

Objectives: Stroke patients suffer from ankle joint deformities due to spastic ankle muscles. This study evaluated the viability of using 3D scanned surface images of the feet of stroke victims to visually assess the deformities of a hemiparetic foot and investigated the influences of deformed ankle joints on gait kinematics.

Methods: A total of 30 subjects with stroke-induced hemiparesis and 11 age-matched healthy controls completed the clinical assessments. We analyzed their feet's morphometric characteristics using a 3D scanner, identified convenient anthropometric measurements, and conducted gait trials on even and uneven terrains. The 3D foot morphometric characteristics were evaluated using the geometric morphometrics method (GMM).

Results: Results showed that there were significant differences in bilateral foot shapes between the chronic stroke patients and healthy controls and between the paretic and non-paretic sides in the chronic stroke patients. In stroke patients, those with the smaller medial malleoli's vertical tilt angles showed significantly different ankle ranges of motion of dorsi-/plantar flexion during gaits on uneven terrains (p = 0.009). In addition, those with the greater medial malleoli's vertical tilt angles showed significantly different ankle ranges of motion of inversion/eversion during gaits on even and uneven terrains (p < 0.05).

Conclusion: Using 3D scanning technology, bilateral morphometric changes in the feet of chronic stroke patients were shown by GMM and the simple anthropometric measurements identified its shape deformities in the feet. Their possible effects on gait kinematics while walking on uneven terrains were investigated. Current methodology can be potentially useful in applying conventional productions of clinically manufactured, patient-fitted ankle-foot-orthosis in orthotics and prosthetics, and in detecting various unidentified pathological deformities in the feet.

Introduction

Most patients with upper motor neuron disorders, such as stroke, multiple sclerosis, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, have spastic lower limb muscles (1). Specifically, 30–70% of stroke survivors suffer from spastic or stiff ankle muscles (2). Spastic muscles in the ankle joints significantly increase joint stiffness owing to the dependence of the muscle tone on the rising velocity of the stretch reflex (3). Thus, patients with stroke-induced hemiparesis suffer from several movement disorders. Previous studies have reported that the equinus foot condition significantly disrupts the gait patterns of stroke patients (4, 5). Decreased muscle activity in the ankle plantar flexors of such patients reduces the propulsive forces acting during their gait (5). A patient with equinovarus foot requires more time to recover than one without equinus foot and they have to undergo intense rehabilitation (6).

Chronic stroke victims who have not undergone ankle treatments suffer from a constant inequivalence between their major ankle muscles, i.e., the spastic triceps surae and ankle dorsiflexors. This inequivalence is responsible for the geometric deformities of a foot (7). A spastic equinus foot introduces many functional limitations into the daily activities of patients, namely foot drop during gait (4, 8) and balance impairments (9). Various clinical treatments, such as orthopedic surgeries, toxin injections, and ankle-foot-orthoses (AFOs) (10, 11) have been adopted to treat the spastic equinovarus foot condition. AFO is a popular assistive technology that has been used to treat patients having a hemiparetic foot, both inside and outside clinics.

Recent advances in scanned 3D digital imaging technology have been successfully incorporated into clinical practice to enable the treatment of various pathological deformities. For example, standardized measurements of 3D surface images of breasts and head shapes allow for obtaining objective dimensions in a subjective field and overcoming the deficits of conventional 2D photography in plastic and reconstructive surgery. This enables clinicians to reproduce their results and precisely track the deformities of patients (12). Although 3D surface imaging technology can be used in applying it to many patient-fitted assistive devices in rehabilitation clinics, orthotics and prosthetics, the application of 3D surface imaging technology in detecting hemiparetic foot deformities is limited. In addition, the traditional approach to shape analysis, using numerical quantities such as the distance or angle between a foot's landmarks, employs quantities that are less verified than the actual coordinates of the landmarks, ignoring the foot's precise geometry (13).

This study evaluates the viability of using 3D scanned surface images of the feet of stroke patients to visually assess the deformities of a hemiparetic foot. Anthropometric measurements that can locate typical foot landmarks, characteristic of hemiparetic foot abnormalities, are easier to obtain when using modern 3D scanning technology. First, we hypothesized that there was no difference in the foot and ankle shapes (1) between the paretic and non-paretic sides in chronic stroke patients and (2) between the hemiparetic sides of chronic stroke patients and age- and gender-matched healthy controls using the geometric morphometrics method (GMM); variations in foot shapes were examined based on the coordinates of foot landmarks as well as by using the traditional approach. Secondly, we hypothesized that (3) the effect of the anthropometric difference between paretic and non-paretic feet did not affect the gait parameters of chronic stroke patients.

Friday, April 10, 2020

Training Conditions Influence Walking Kinematics and Self-Selected Walking Speed in Patients with Neurological Impairments

In the past nine years have we made ANY PROGRESS TOWARDS GETTING WALKING PROTOCOLS? Or are we still in the dark ages where every stroke patient is a guinea pig in an unregistered one person clinical trial?  THIS is why a hell of a lot of people in stroke need to be fired, they aren't solving stroke, just going thru the motions from their university training.

Training Conditions Influence Walking Kinematics and Self-Selected Walking Speed in Patients with Neurological Impairments

Journal of Neurotrauma, 2011

 Gavin Williams,1
Ross Clark,2
Anthony Schache,3
Natalie A. Fini,4
Liz Moore,5
Meg E. Morris,2
and Paul R. McCrory6

Abstract

Gait training is a major focus of rehabilitation for many people with neurological disorders, yet systematic reviews have failed to identify the most effective form of gait training. The main objective of this study was to compare conditions for gait training for people with acquired brain injury (ABI). Seventeen people who had sustained an ABI and were unable to walk without assistance were recruited as a sample. Each participant was exposed to seven alternative gait training conditions in a randomized order. These were: (1) therapist manual facilitation; (2) the use of a gait-assistive device; (3) unsupported treadmill walking; and (4) four variations of  body weight support treadmill training (BWSTT). Quantitative gait analysis was performed and Gait ProfileScores (GPS) were generated for each participant to determine which condition most closely resembled normal walking. BWSTT without additional therapist or self-support of the upper limbs was associated with more severe gait abnormality [Wilks’ lambda=0.20, F(6, 6)=3.99, p=0.047]. With the exception of therapist facilitation, the gait training conditions that achieved the closest approximation of normal walking required self-support of the upper limbs. When participants held on to a stable handrail, self-selected gait speeds were up to three times higher than the speeds obtained for over-ground walking [Wilks’ lambda=0.17, F(6, 7)=5.85, p<0.05]. The provision of stable upper-limb support was associated with high self-selected gait speeds that were not sustained when walking over ground. BWSTT protocols may need to prioritize reduction in self-support of the upper limbs, instead of increasing treadmill speed and reducing body weight support, in order to improve training outcomes.
 

Friday, June 14, 2019

The Effect of a Cognitive Dual Task on the Control of Minimum Toe Clearance While Walking

I got nothing out of this, but maybe our stroke leaders could inform us if this testing needs to be followed up with stroke patients.  Do our stroke leaders have any way for stroke survivors to contact them?

The Effect of a Cognitive Dual Task on the Control of Minimum Toe Clearance While Walking 

The aim of the current study was to evaluate the effect of a cognitive dual task on minimum toe clearance (MTC) variability while walking. In a randomized cross-over design, gait kinematics of 25 older (70 ± 6 years) and 45 younger adults (25 ± 2 years) were captured during normal walking and dual-task walking. Variability of stride time, stride length, and MTC were calculated. Differences between normal versus dual-task walking were assessed using Wilcoxon tests. Compared with normal walking, dual-task walking caused an increase in stride time variability (older adults: p < .001 and younger adults: p < .001), while the variability of MTC decreased (older adults: p = .032 and younger adults: p = .012). MTC seems to be a task-relevant gait parameter that is controlled with high priority to preserve its variability under challenging conditions.