Effects of physical exertion on trans-tibial prosthesis users' ability to accommodate alignment perturbations. Prosthet Orthot Int 2016 Feb;40(1):75-82
Date
08/21/2014Pubmed ID
25138114Pubmed Central ID
PMC4380863DOI
10.1177/0309364614545419Scopus ID
2-s2.0-84962579286 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site) 10 CitationsAbstract
BACKGROUND: It has long been reported that a range of prosthesis alignments is acceptable in trans-tibial prosthetics. This range was shown to be smaller when walking on uneven surfaces. It has also been argued that findings on gait with prostheses that were obtained under laboratory conditions are limited in their applicability to real-life environments.
OBJECTIVES: This study investigated the hypothesis that efforts to compensate for suboptimal alignments by active users of trans-tibial prostheses become less effective when levels of physical exertion increase.
STUDY DESIGN: A 2 × 2 repeated-measures analysis of variance was conducted to compare the effects of physical exertion and subtle alignment perturbations on gait with trans-tibial prostheses.
METHODS: The gait of eight subjects with trans-tibial amputation was analyzed when walking with two different prosthesis alignments and two different physical exertion levels. The main and interaction effects were statistically evaluated.
RESULTS: Bilateral step length symmetry and measures of step variability within the same leg were found to be affected by the intervention. There was no significant effect on index variables that combined kinematic or kinetic measures.
CONCLUSION: Findings showed that persons with trans-tibial prostheses responded heterogeneously to the interventions. For most variables, the research hypothesis could not be confirmed.
CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Findings support the practice of allotting several sessions to the alignment of trans-tibial prostheses, as users' gait responds differently to perturbations when external factors (e.g. exertion) change. Furthermore, the found inhomogeneity in the population of persons with trans-tibial amputation supports the use of technical gait assessment methods in clinical practice.
Author List
Fiedler G, Slavens BA, O'Connor KM, Smith RO, Hafner BJAuthors
Brooke Slavens BS,MS,PhD Professor in the Mechanical Engineering department at University of Wisconsin - MilwaukeeRoger Smith PhD Professor in the Occupational Science & Technology department at University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold
AdultAge Factors
Aged
Amputees
Anthropometry
Biomechanical Phenomena
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Physical Exertion
Prognosis
Prosthesis Design
Prosthesis Fitting
Range of Motion, Articular
Risk Assessment
Sampling Studies
Tibia
Walking
Weight-Bearing