| Literature DB >> 29093757 |
John B Arnold1, Paolo Caravaggi2, François Fraysse1, Dominic Thewlis3, Alberto Leardini2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In 3D gait analysis, kinematics of the foot joints are usually reported via isolated time histories of joint rotations and no information is provided on the relationship between rotations at different joints. The aim of this study was to identify movement coordination patterns in the foot during walking by expanding an existing vector coding technique according to an established multi-segment foot and ankle model. A graphical representation is also described to summarise the coordination patterns of joint rotations across multiple patients.Entities:
Keywords: Coordination pattern; Coupling angle; Foot joints; Multi-segment foot kinematics; Rizzoli foot model; Vector coding technique; Walking
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29093757 PMCID: PMC5661917 DOI: 10.1186/s13047-017-0228-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Foot Ankle Res ISSN: 1757-1146 Impact factor: 2.303
Fig. 1a Polar coordinate chart for the identification of coordination patterns between foot joints rotations. An exemplary trajectory of the coupling angle between ShCa (y) and CaMi (y) rotations is superimposed to the polar coordinate chart. b the frame-by-frame slope of the coupling angle is analysed to determine the coordination patterns. c Graphical representation of the four possible coordination patterns: in-phase; anti-phase; proximal, and distal
Fig. 2Left (a-d), mean temporal profiles of pairs of foot joints rotations (±1 standard deviation band) normalized to stance duration across all walking trials of all subjects. Right (a1-d1), angle-angle trajectories (i.e. coupling angle) for the pairs of joints rotations on the left. Where: ShCa (y) is the coronal-plane rotation of the midfoot with respect to the calcaneus; CaMi (x) and CaMi (y) are the sagittal and coronal-plane rotations of the midfoot with respect to the calcaneus; MiMe (y) is the coronal-plane rotation of the metatarsus with respect to the midfoot, and MeHa (x) is the sagittal plane rotation of the hallux with respect to the metatarsus. The trajectory initial point (0% stance) is highlighted by the ‘+’ symbol
Fig. 3For each pair of joints rotations (a-d), color maps of the frame-by-frame percentage of walking trials in each coupling state during normalized stance duration. Where dark colors indicate lower percentages of walking trials in each coupling state and bright colors indicate larger percentages
Median frequency (# of frames) spent in each of the four coordination phases during early, middle and late stance. Values are presented as median [interquartile range]
| CaMi (y) - ShCa (y) | CaMi (x) - ShCa (y) | MiMe (y) - ShCa (y) | MeHa (x) – ShCa (y) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Anti-Phase | 3 [3.5] | 5 [4.5] | 3 [4] | 10.5 [5.5] |
| Distal | 2 [2] | 4.5 [4] | 1 [2] | 10 [7.5] |
| In-Phase | 7 [6] | 6 [6] | 2 [4] | 5 [5.5] |
| Proximal | 19.5 [8] | 17 [7.5] | 25 [6] | 6.5 [6] |
|
| ||||
| Anti-Phase | 4.5 [7.5] | 11 [11.5] | 4 [5.5] | 6.5 [6] |
| Distal | 2 [4] | 9 [9] | 2 [4.5] | 11 [12.5] |
| In-Phase | 5 [4.5] | 3.5 [7.5] | 4 [6] | 5.5 [8] |
| Proximal | 19 [7.5] | 5 [7.5] | 20 [9.5] | 7 [8] |
|
| ||||
| Anti-Phase | 1 [2] | 8 [6.5] | 1 [2.5] | 3 [3] |
| Distal | 5 [7] | 16 [7.5] | 4 [8] | 28 [3.5] |
| In-Phase | 12.5 [8] | 6 [6.5] | 14 [11] | 1 [2] |
| Proximal | 13 [5.5] | 4 [3.5] | 12 [11] | 1 [1] |