We characterized the magnitude and range of gait asymmetry during self-paced treadmill running. On an instrumented treadmill, twelve trained runners (11 males, 1 female) completed a 30-min self-paced run, during which participants were instructed to cover the most distance possible. Ground reaction force recordings at a constant velocity corresponding to 70% of their maximal aerobic velocity (13.3 ± 0.8 km.h) allowed for the measurement of running kinetics and kinematics, as well as the calculation of spring-mass characteristics at the beginning, middle, and end of the run (minutes 1, 14, and 29, respectively). Group mean asymmetry scores were assessed using the "symmetry angle" (SA) formulae, where scores of 0% and 100% represent perfect symmetry and perfect asymmetry, respectively. There was no time effect on SA scores for any of the 13 biomechanical variables ( ≥ 0.128). Mean SA scores were <2.5% for contact time (0.8% ± 0.7%), flight time (1.4% ± 0.6%), step frequency (0.7% ± 0.3%), duty factor (0.7% ± 0.3%), duration of braking (1.3% ± 0.7%) and push-off phases (0.9% ± 0.8%), as well as peak braking (2.3% ± 1.3%) and push-off forces (1.4% ± 0.9%). Mean SA scores were ≥2.5% for peak vertical loading rate (3.1% ± 1.7%), mean vertical loading rate (3.4% ± 2.1%), peak vertical forces (2.9% ± 2.2%), as well as vertical stiffness (5.2% ± 3.5%) and leg stiffness (2.5% ± 1.5%). Throughout a 30-min running time trial, there were consistently low-to-moderate mechanical asymmetries for spatiotemporal variables, kinetics, and spring-mass model characteristics. This suggests that trained runners maintained relatively even strides during the self-paced treadmill run, with lower extremities behaving similarly when controlling for velocity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2023.1289172 | DOI Listing |
PLoS One
December 2024
Center of Advanced Technologies in Rehabilitation, Sheba Medical Center, Ramat Gan, Israel.
Bipedal locomotion requires body adaptation to maintain stability after encountering a transition to incline walking. A major part of this adaptation is reflected by adjusting walking speed. When transitioning to uphill walking, people exert more energy to counteract gravitational forces pulling them backward, while when transitioning to downhill walking people break to avoid uncontrolled acceleration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Rehabil Med
January 2024
Rehabilitation Research Group, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium; Center for Neurosciences (C4N), Brussels, Belgium; Brussels Human Robotic Research Center (BruBotics), Brussels, Belgium; Alliance research group REBI (Rehabilitation technology for people with a brain injury), Vrije Universiteit Brussel & Ghent University, Brussels, Ghent, Belgium.
Objectives: To investigate how people post-stroke and healthy people experience the addition of semi-immersive virtual reality (VR) and optic flow speed manipulation while walking on a treadmill, and if optic flow speed manipulation could be used in rehabilitation to elicit changes in post-stroke gait biomechanics.
Methods: Sixteen people post-stroke and 16 healthy controls walked on a self-paced treadmill. After 2 habituation trials (without and with VR), participants walked 3 more trials under the following conditions of optic flow: matched, slow, and fast.
Physiother Theory Pract
October 2024
Department of Sports Medicine, Athletic Training Laboratory, Kyung Hee University, Yongin, Korea.
Background: Comparisons of talar cartilage and the anterior talofibular ligament (ATFL) profiles in individuals with different levels of chronic ankle instability (CAI) provide insight into early adaptation of tissue morphology.
Purpose: This study compared morphologic response and recovery of the talar cartilage and ATFL before and after 30-min of self-paced treadmill running between individuals with CAI, coper (full recovery from a first-time ankle sprain), and healthy controls.
Methods: Sixty young males (24.
Sports Med Open
September 2024
Swedish Winter Sports Research Centre, Department of Health Sciences, Mid Sweden University, Studentplan 4, Östersund, 831 40, Sweden.
Int J Sports Physiol Perform
November 2024
Faculty of Sport and Health Sciences, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland.
Purpose: To examine the reproducibility and sensitivity of a self-paced field running test (SFT) in monitoring positive and negative changes in endurance performance.
Methods: A total of 27 (11 women) recreational runners participated in a 6-week training intervention. The intervention was divided into a 3-week baseline period, a 2-week overload period, and a 1-week recovery period.
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