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A comparison of shoulder joint forces during ambulation with crutches versus a walker in persons with incomplete spinal cord injury
HAUBERT LL; GUTIERREZ DD; NEWSAM CJ; GRONLEY JK; MULROY SJ; PERRY J
ARCH PHYS MED REHABIL , 2006, vol. 87, n° 1, p. 63-70 Doc n°: 123994 Localisation : Documentation IRR Descripteurs : AE21 - ORIGINE TRAUMATIQUE, DF22 - EXPLORATION EXAMENS BILANS - MARCHE, DD3 - EPAULE
Article consultable sur : http://www.archives-pmr.org
Objective: To compare 3-dimensional (3D) shoulder joint reaction forces and stride characteristics during bilateral forearm crutches and front-wheeled walker ambulation in persons with incomplete spinal cord injury (SCI). Design: Cross-sectional cohort study. Setting: Biomechanics laboratory. Participants: Fourteen adult volunteers with incomplete SCI recruited from outpatient rehabilitation hospital services. Interventions: Not applicable. Main Outcome Measure: Peak force, rate of loading, and force-time integral were compared for each component of the net 3D shoulder joint reaction force during ambulation with crutches and a walker. Stride characteristics were also compared between assistive device conditions. Results: The largest weight-bearing force was superiorly directed, followed by the posterior force. The superior joint force demonstrated a significantly higher peak and rate of loading during crutch walking (48.9N and 311.6N/s, respectively, vs 45.3N and 199.8N/s, respectively). The largest non-weight-bearing force was inferiorly directed with a significantly greater peak occurring during crutch ambulation (43.2N vs 23.6N during walker gait). Walking velocity and cadence were similar; however, stride length was significantly greater during crutch walking (62% vs 58% of normal). Conclusions: Shoulder joint forces during assisted ambulation were large. Crutch use increased the superior force but did not increase walking velocity. Langue : ANGLAIS |
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