| Literature DB >> 31236415 |
Xueyi Zhang1,2,3, Goeran Fiedler2, Zhicheng Liu1,3.
Abstract
A variety of prescribed accommodation periods have been used in published prosthesis intervention studies that have examined biomechanical outcomes. Few investigators included repeated measurements in their study design, leaving questions as to how measured outcomes change as amputees acclimate to a new prosthesis. This paper is the product of our investigation as to whether measured gait variables were affected by the duration of accommodation period, and to assess the relationship between measured outcomes and the subjective perception of the participants. A sample of transtibial amputees were recruited for this study. Gait data was collected by wearable sensor repeatedly, starting immediately after fitting the interventional foot and extending over a subsequent four days. Participants indicated their perceived accommodation quality on a visual analog scale (VAS). A total of twelve commonly used spatiotemporal gait parameters were analyzed. Friedman tests were used to determine overall differences across time points in both early (one hour) and late (day two through five) accommodation phases, for each gait variable. Statistically significant changes across the early phase were found for variables gait speed χ 2(2)=8.000, p=0.018, cadence χ 2(2)=7.185, p=0.028, and double support time on the sound side χ 2(2)=8.615, p=0.013. Across days two through five, no gait variable significantly changed. VAS scores correlated strongly with step count (r=1.000, p<0.001) and cadence (r=0.857, p=0.014). Longer accommodation periods resulted in less deviations of gait variables for the clinical assessment in the process of prosthetic rehabilitation. Trying out prosthetic interventions for less than one hour has yielded unreliable outcomes.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31236415 PMCID: PMC6545810 DOI: 10.1155/2019/9252368
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Gait data on repeat measured time points in Phase 2 while subjects adapt to the new prosthetic foot.
| Gait variables | D2 | D3 | D4 | D5 | Friedman tests | Baseline |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gait Speed (m/s) | 1.13 (1.06-1.34) | 1.29 (1.21-1.30) | 1.12 (0.95-1.30) | 1.19 (1.08-1.49) | 4.433, 0.218 | 1.17(0.83-1.35) |
| Cadence (step/min) | 99.8(93.0-110.7) | 103.0 (94.2-109.7) | 101.9(89.5-110.8) | 104.3(96.1-107.1) | 5.118, 0.163 | 100.9(85.6-105.5) |
| Step Length A (%) | 51.3 (48.7-52.6) | 51.7 (49.7-55.5) | 51.2 (49.8-54.6) | 49.9 (47.6-54.1) | 2.294, 0.514 | 51.5(49.3-53.8) |
| Step Length S (%) | 48.7 (47.4-51.3) | 48.3 (44.5-50.3) | 48.8 (45.4-50.2) | 50.1 (45.9-52.4) | 2.294, 0.514 | 48.5(46.2-50.7) |
| Stance Phase A (%) | 60.5 (55.8-63.5) | 60.5 (57.9-62.8) | 59.4 (56.1-63.4) | 59.2 (57.9-63.2) | 1.478, 0.687 | 62.1(56.0-65.8) |
| Stance Phase S (%) | 60.0 (59.2-66.1) | 62.9 (58.3-66.2) | 65.7 (57.4-67.2) | 62.6 (57.8-65.7) | 0.882, 0.830 | 61.4(60.5-72.9) |
| Swing Phase A (%) | 39.5 (36.5-44.2) | 39.5 (37.2-42.1) | 40.6 (36.6-43.9) | 40.8 (36.8-42.1) | 1.478, 0.687 | 37.9(34.2-44.0) |
| Swing Phase S (%) | 40.0 (33.9-40.8) | 37.1 (33.8-41.7) | 34.3 (32.8-42.6) | 37.4 (34.3-42.2) | 0.882, 0.830 | 38.6(27.1-39.5) |
| Double Support A (%) | 11.6 (7.8-13.1) | 8.7 (7.2-15.8) | 11.0 (8.5-14.5) | 11.4 (7.8-14.7) | 1.412, 0.703 | 10.6(8.1-16.3) |
| Double Support S (%) | 11.6 (9.3-15.6) | 11.5 (9.5-12.3) | 11.7 (9.8-13.9) | 10.6 (9.8-10.9) | 6.529, 0.089 | 12.4(9.7-20.6) |
| Single Support A (%) | 39.7 (35.7-40.8) | 37.1 (34.7-41.6) | 34.6 (32.6-43.0) | 37.9 (34.6-42.5) | 1.388, 0.708 | 38.1(26.7-40.4) |
| Single Support S (%) | 39.2 (36.6-42.6) | 39.2 (37.5-42.5) | 40.1 (36.5-43.9) | 41.3 (36.7-42.0) | 0.529, 0.912 | 37.9(34.5-44.5) |
Median value (25th-75th percentiles value), ∗p<0.05.
A: affected side, S: sound side.
Anthropometric data of the study sample.
| Subject | Age | Height | Weight | Time since limb loss/years | Original foot |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 55 | 177 | 85.7 | 19 | College Park Trustep |
| 2 | 73 | 168 | 82.1 | 11 | Otto Bock LuXon Max |
| 3 | 62 | 183 | 88.5 | 7 | Endolite Echelon |
| 4 | 53 | 173 | 93.0 | 4 | Ossur Talux |
| 5 | 61 | 178 | 88.5 | 5 | College Park Soleus |
| 6 | 40 | 186 | 68.0 | 16 | Otto Bock Triton Low Profile |
| 7 | 27 | 170 | 90.7 | 22 | Ossur Re-Flex |
Gait data on repeat measured time points in Phase 1 while subjects adapt to the new prosthetic foot.
| Gait variables | T0 | T1 | T2 | Friedman tests | T0-T1 | T1-T2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gait Speed (m/s) | 1.18 (1.00-1.28) | 1.16 (1.00-1.26) | 1.11 (0.85-1.21) | 8.000, 0.018 | 0.499 | 0.018 |
| Cadence (step/min) | 95.6(87.3-107.4) | 98.8 (86.9-109.2) | 98.8(75.2-108.4) | 7.185, 0.028 | 0.063 | 0.028 |
| Step Length A (%) | 53.4 (50.3-54.0) | 51.0 (48.4-54.6) | 50.5 (48.5-54.3) | 0.286, 0.867 | ||
| Step Length S (%) | 46.6 (46.0-49.7) | 49.0 (48.4-51.6) | 49.5 (45.7-51.5) | 0.286, 0.867 | ||
| Stance Phase A (%) | 58.4 (56.0-61.4) | 59.7 (54.8-60.2) | 61.9 (56.3-63.8) | 3.714, 0.156 | ||
| Stance Phase S (%) | 61.4 (57.6-67.6) | 60.2 (58.5-66.6) | 61.0 (56.3-63.8) | 0.000, 1.000 | ||
| Swing Phase A (%) | 41.6 (38.6-44.0) | 40.3 (39.8-45.2) | 38.1 (36.2-43.7) | 3.714, 0.156 | ||
| Swing Phase S (%) | 38.6 (32.4-42.4) | 39.8 (33.4-41.5) | 39.0 (31.0-42.2) | 0.000, 1.000 | ||
| Double Support A (%) | 10.6 (8.2-11.2) | 9.2 (7.1-13.4) | 12.1 (8.6-14.5) | 3.429, 0.180 | ||
| Double Support S (%) | 8.6 (7.3-17.0) | 10.0 (7.3-11.7) | 11.7 (7.8-16.2) | 8.615, 0.013 | 0.892 | 0.018 |
| Single Support A (%) | 38.1 (33.6-41.6) | 39.9 (33.4-42.3) | 38.0 (30.8-42.1) | 0.286, 0.867 | ||
| Single Support S (%) | 41.5 (38.8-44.5) | 40.6(39.8-45.3) | 38.1 (36.3-44.1) | 3.714, 0.156 |
Median value (25th-75th percentiles value), ∗p<0.05.
T0: immediately after fitting the interventional foot, T1: half an hour, T2: one hour.
A: affected side, S: sound side.
Relationships between perceived accommodation quality and gait variables of trans-tibial prosthesis users.
| Gait Variables | Spearman Coefficient |
|---|---|
| Steps | 1.000 (<0.001) |
| Gait Speed (m/s) | 0.571 (0.180) |
| Cadence (step/min) | 0.857 (0.014) |
| Step Length A (%) | -0.214 (0.645) |
| Step Length S (%) | 0.214 (0.645) |
| Stance A (%) | 0.250 (0.589) |
| Stance S (%) | 0.500 (0.253) |
| Swing A (%) | -0.250 (0.589) |
| Swing S (%) | -0.500 (0.253) |
| Double Support A (%) | 0.714 (0.071) |
| Double Support S (%) | 0.464 (0.294) |
| Single Support A (%) | -0.286 (0.535) |
| Single Support S (%) | -0.321 (0.482) |
A: affected side, S: sound side, ∗p< 0.05. ∗∗p< 0.001
Figure 1VAS scores and step counts while participants accommodated to a new prosthesis foot across the whole adaptation phase.
Figure 2Trajectory across the entire adaptation phase of gait variables that significantly changed across Phase 1 (data is reported as mean). ▲ Repeated measures Friedman tests showed statistically significant differences in Phase 1 of gait variables.