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Contralateral pelvic drop during gait increases knee adduction moments of asymptomatic individuals.

Authors :
Dunphy, Caitlyn
Casey, Sarah
Lomond, Adam
Rutherford, Derek
Source :
Human Movement Science. Oct2016, Vol. 49, p27-35. 9p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

<bold>Purpose: </bold>The current study purpose was to investigate the effects of contralateral pelvic drop gait on the magnitude of the knee adduction moment (KAM) within asymptomatic individuals.<bold>Methods: </bold>15 participants walked on a dual belt instrumented treadmill while segment motions and ground reaction forces were recorded. Participants completed typical gait trials and pelvic drop gait trials. The net external KAM was calculated using inverse dynamics. Peak and impulse were identified. Frontal plane hip abduction/adduction and pelvic drop were determined. Correlations and paired t-tests were used for statistical hypothesis testing (alpha=0.05).<bold>Results: </bold>Peak hip adduction angle reached 4° (±6°) during pelvic drop trials compared to 0° (±6°) in the typical gait trials (p<0.05) equating to 4° of pelvic drop. KAM impulse was higher in the pelvic drop trial (0.16Nms/kg±0.04) compared to the typical gait trial (0.13Nms/kg±0.05) (p<0.001). Peak KAM was higher in the pelvic drop trial (0.55Nm/kg±0.15) compared to the typical gait trial (0.40Nm/kg±0.109) (p<0.001). Correlations between change in KAM and change in hip adduction moment and pelvic drop were r>0.80 (p<0.001).<bold>Conclusion: </bold>Pelvic drop gait increased KAM peak and impulse. Results have implications for understanding relationships between frontal plane hip movement and the knee adduction moment during gait. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01679457
Volume :
49
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Human Movement Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
118074855
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.humov.2016.05.008