RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: This study presents the walking abilities of participants fitted with transfemoral bone-anchored prostheses using a total of 14 gait parameters. DESIGN: Two-centre retrospective cross-sectional comparative study. SETTING: Research facilities equipped with tridimensional motion capture systems. PARTICIPANTS: Two control arms included eight able-bodied participants arm (54 ± 9 years, 1.75 ± 0.07â m, 76 ± 7â kg) and nine participants fitted with transfemoral socket-suspended prostheses arm (59 ± 9 years, 1.73 ± 0.07â m, 80 ± 16â kg). The intervention arm included nine participants fitted with transfemoral bone-anchored prostheses arm (51 ± 13 years, 1.78 ± 0.09â m, 87.3 ± 16.1â kg). INTERVENTION: Fitting of transfemoral bone-anchored prostheses. MAIN MEASURES: Comparisons were performed for two spatio-temporal, three spatial and nine temporal gait parameters. RESULTS: The cadence and speed of walking were 107 ± 6 steps/min and 1.23 ± 0.19â m/s for the able-bodied participants arm, 88 ± 7 steps/min and 0.87 ± 0.17â m/s for the socket-suspended prosthesis arm, and 96 ± 6 steps/min and 1.03 ± 0.17â m/s for bone-anchored prosthesis arm, respectively. Able-bodied participants and bone-anchored prosthesis arms were comparable in age, height, and body mass index as well as cadence and speed of walking, but the able-bodied participant arm showed a swing phase 31% shorter. Bone-anchored and socket-suspended prostheses arms were comparable for age, height, mass, and body mass index as well as cadence and speed of walking, but the bone-anchored prosthesis arm showed a step width and duration of double support in seconds 65% and 41% shorter, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Bone-anchored and socket-suspended prostheses restored equally well the gait parameters at a self-selected speed. This benchmark data provides new insights into the walking ability of individuals using transfemoral bionics bone-anchored prostheses.
Assuntos
Amputados , Membros Artificiais , Prótese Ancorada no Osso , Humanos , Amputação Cirúrgica , Estudos Retrospectivos , Estudos Transversais , Marcha , Caminhada , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Desenho de PróteseRESUMO
12 young adults were requested to walk along a circuitous path including turns, slaloms, stair ascending and descending, while wearing an inertial sensor placed on the back at the lumbar level. The path was completed under two conditions: with no additive cognitive task, and while performing a cognitive task and texting on a smartphone. Different temporal global parameters of gait were extracted from the inertial sensor data, to check for differences driven by the presence of the cognitive task. Regularity, durations, and temporal characteristics of gait resulted significantly affected from the presence of the additional task, and this effect was only in part due to a modification coming from the decrease in walking speed.