The assessment of gait performance using quantitative measures can yield crucial insights into an individual's health status. Recently, computer vision-based human pose estimation has emerged as a promising solution for markerless gait analysis, as it allows for the direct extraction of gait parameters from videos. This study aimed to compare the lower extremity kinematics and spatiotemporal gait parameters obtained from a single-camera-based markerless method with those acquired from a marker-based motion tracking system across a healthy population. Additionally, we investigated the impact of camera viewing angles and distances on the accuracy of the markerless method. Our findings demonstrated a robust correlation and agreement (R > 0.75, R > 0.7) between the markerless and marker-based methods for most spatiotemporal gait parameters. We also observed strong correlations (R > 0.8) between the two methods for hip flexion/extension, knee flexion/extension, hip abduction/adduction, and hip internal/external rotation. Statistical tests revealed significant effects of viewing angles and distances on the accuracy of the identified gait parameters. While the markerless method offers an alternative for general gait analysis, particularly when marker use is impractical, its accuracy for clinical applications remains insufficient and requires substantial improvement. Future investigations should explore the potential of the markerless system to measure gait parameters in pathological gaits.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbiomech.2024.112027 | DOI Listing |
Disabil Rehabil
January 2025
Caring Futures Institute, College of Nursing and Health Sciences, Flinders University, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
Purpose: To systematically review the evidence investigating the implementation of cardiorespiratory (CR) training in adults following a stroke and to understand how interventions are prescribed to address cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF).
Methods: Medline, CINAHL, EMBASE, EMCARE, Scopus, PEDro and ProQuest were searched from inception until January 2024. Inclusion criteria were studies that included adults following a stroke, investigated CR training interventions and used standardised CRF assessments.
Acta Ortop Bras
January 2025
Hospital Getulio Vargas, Departamento de Ortopedia e Traumatologia, do Hospital Getúlio Vargas, Recife, Pernambuco, PE, Brazil.
Introduction: The three-dimensional evaluation of patients in the gait laboratory is a diagnostic method that is gaining ground in various orthopedic pathologies and, in the case of ankle fractures, can more accurately detail the degree of joint limitation.
Objective: To present the importance of laboratory gait studies in the postoperative period of ankle fractures associated with syndesmosis ligament injuries, increasing the arsenal for assessing whether the surgical approach and outcome were satisfactory.
Methods: Case series of 13 patients who underwent surgical treatment for ankle fractures associated with syndesmosis injuries, evaluated postoperatively in the gait clinic using the BTS GAITLAB hardware program.
J Biomech
January 2025
Sport and Physical Activity Research Centre, Sheffield Hallam University, Olympic Legacy Park, 2 Old Hall Rd, Sheffield S9 3TY, United Kingdom. Electronic address:
Changes to the variability within biomechanical signals may reflect a change in the health of the human system. However, for running gait variability measures calculated from wearable device data, it is unknown whether a between-day difference reflects a shift in system dynamics reflective of a change in human health or is a result of poor between-day reliability of the measurement device or the biomechanical signal. This study investigated the reliability of stride time and sacral acceleration variability measures calculated from inertial measurement units (IMUs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Med
January 2025
IRCCS Istituto Ortopedico Galeazzi, 20157 Milan, Italy.
While the importance of the upper and lower limbs in locomotion is well understood, the kinematics of the trunk during walking remains largely unexplored. Two decades ago, a casual observation was reported indicating spine lengthening in a small sample of mostly children during walking, but this observation was never replicated. Objectives: This study aims to verify the preliminary observation that spine lengthening occurs during walking and to explore changes in spine kinematics across three different age groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
December 2024
Department of Engineering, University of Exeter, Exeter EX4 4QF, UK.
A rapidly growing body of experimental evidence in the literature shows that the effects of humans interacting with vibrating structures, other humans, and their surrounding environment can be critical for reliable estimation of structural vibrations. The Interaction-based Vibration Serviceability Assessment framework (I-VSA) was proposed by the authors in 2017 to address this, taking into account human-structure dynamic interactions (HSI) to simulate the structural vibrations experienced by each occupant/pedestrian. The I-VSA method, however, had limited provisions to simulate simultaneously multiple modes of structure in HSI, to simulate human-human and human-environment interactions, and the movement pattern of the occupants/pedestrians.
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