Patients' with a hemiplegic gait and difficulties with activities of daily living may improve through intensive training of their paretic lower limbs. This study examined the possibility of improving their gait by immobilizing the non-paretic knee joint in extension and promoting weight shift toward the paretic side. Single-case ABABA studies were conducted, involving three patients with hemiplegia. The patients walked with their non-paretic knee joints immobilized in extension using a dial-lock knee orthosis during the intervention (B1 and B2) periods. Measurement items included (1) temporal and distance factors and (2) hip, knee, and ankle joint angles during gait. In all subjects, the stance phase was significantly prolonged on the paretic side during all intervention periods following the first baseline (A1) period. In Subject 1, hip extension in the stance phase improved during all intervention periods following the A1 period, and, in Subjects 2 and 3, the knee hyperextension in the stance phase, which was observed during the A1 period, was resolved during the second (A2) and third (A3) baseline periods. Gait training with non-paretic knee immobilization may promote weight shift toward the paretic side to overcome a swing limitation on the immobilized side, consequently providing an opportunity for training in weight bearing for the paretic limb and an improved, more symmetrical gait pattern.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09593985.2018.1442535 | DOI Listing |
Cureus
December 2024
Department of Rehabilitation, Musashigaoka Hospital, Kumamoto, JPN.
Gait asymmetry in post-stroke patients is an important gait characteristic that is associated with their balance control, inefficiency, and risks of musculoskeletal injury to the non-paretic lower limb and falling. Unfortunately, most stroke patients retain an asymmetrical gait pattern, even though their gait independence and gait speed improve. We describe the clinical course of a subacute stroke patient who achieved a symmetrical gait at discharge after undergoing both gait training with orthoses and robot-assisted gait training from the early intervention phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bodyw Mov Ther
October 2024
Department of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Division of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Faculty of Health Sciences, Istanbul University-Cerrahpasa, Istanbul, Turkey. Electronic address:
Purpose: This cross-sectional study determined the relationship between functional independence and balance, functional exercise capacity, and knee extensor strength in individuals with chronic stroke.
Material And Methods: The study included fifty-four individuals with chronic stroke. A single physiotherapist evaluated clinical features.
PeerJ
November 2024
Department of Biomedical Sciences and Biomedical Engineering, Faculty of Medicine, Prince of Songkla University, Hatyai, Songkhla, Thailand.
Cureus
July 2024
Faculty of Welfare and Health Science, Oita University, Oita, JPN.
This case report describes a woman in her fifties who experienced a left-sided atherothrombotic cerebral infarction with lesions in the left corona radiata. The patient exhibited motor paralysis of the right upper and lower limbs. After a 10-day acute hospital stay, she was admitted to a rehabilitation facility for an intensive program of physical, occupational, and speech therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
May 2024
Department of Rehabilitation and Physiotherapy, University of Medical Sciences, 28 Czerwca 1956 Str., No 135/147, 60-545 Poznań, Poland.
(1) Background: The study aimed to determine the most important activities of the knee joints related to gait re-education in patients in the subacute period after a stroke. We focused on the tests that a physiotherapist could perform in daily clinical practice. (2) Methods: Twenty-nine stroke patients (SG) and 29 healthy volunteers (CG) were included in the study.
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