Volume 86, Issue 8 , Pages 1539-1544, August 2005
Gait Analysis in a Challenging Environment Differentiates Between Fallers and Nonfallers Among Older Patients With Peripheral Neuropathy
Abstract
Richardson JK, Thies SB, DeMott TK, Ashton-Miller JA. Gait analysis in a challenging environmental differentiates between fallers and nonfallers among older patients with peripheral neuropathy.
Objective
To identify differences in gait based on fall history among a group of older subjects with peripheral neuropathy (PN) in 2 environments: standard (SE) (smooth surface, normal lighting) and challenging (CE) (irregular surface, low lighting).
Design
Observational, case-control study of PN subjects with and without a history of falling in the previous year.
Setting
A biomechanical laboratory.
Participants
Forty-two subjects (mean age, 64.7±9.8y; 20 [47.6%] women), including 22 (52.4%) with a history of at least 1 fall in the previous year.
Intervention
Subjects walked in the SE and CE while kinematic data were obtained.
Main Outcome Measures
Step width variability, step time variability, step width-to-step length ratio, step length, and step time and speed (with step length and speed normalized for height) in the SE and CE.
Results
In the SE, gait parameters of subjects with and without a history of falls did not differ significantly. However, in the CE, subjects with a history of falls had increased step time variability (P=.001). Moreover, significant interactions between environment and fall status were identified: in the CE, subjects with a history of falls had greater increases in step time variability (P=.010) and step width-to-step length ratio (P=.009) and greater decreases in step length (P=.007) and speed (P=.045) than did subjects with no fall history.
Conclusions
Analysis of gait in the CE and adjustment to the CE from the SE effectively identified gait characteristics associated with falls in an older PN population, whereas analysis of gait in the SE did not. PN-associated gait dysfunction is more sensitively detected on an irregular rather than on a flat surface.
Key Words: Accidental falls , Gait , Peripheral neuropathies , Rehabilitation
Supported by US Public Health Service (grant nos. K23AG00989, P60AG08808).No commercial party having a direct financial interest in the results of the research supporting this article has or will confer a benefit on the author(s) or on any organization with which the author(s) is/are associated.
PII: S0003-9993(05)00198-X
doi:10.1016/j.apmr.2004.12.032
© 2005 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 86, Issue 8 , Pages 1539-1544, August 2005
