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Pelvic step: The contribution of horizontal pelvis rotation to step length in young healthy adults walking on a treadmill

Authors :
Jaap H. van Dieën
Sjoerd M. Bruijn
Hai Hu
Bo Wei Liang
Maarten R. Prins
Go Rong Lv
Onno G. Meijer
Jianhua Lin
Xiao Cong Lin
Wen Hua Wu
Movement Behavior
Kinesiology
Research Institute MOVE
Source :
Liang, B W, Wu, W H, Meijer, O G, Lin, J H, Lv, G R, Lin, X C, Prins, M R, Hu, H, van Dieen, J H & Bruijn, S M 2014, ' Pelvic step: The contribution of horizontal pelvis rotation to step length in young healthy adults walking on a treadmill ', Gait and Posture, vol. 39, no. 1, pp. 105-110 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gaitpost.2013.06.006, Gait and Posture, 39(1), 105-110. Elsevier
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Transverse plane pelvis rotations during walking may be regarded as the "first determinant of gait". This would assume that pelvis rotations increase step length, and thereby reduce the vertical movements of the centre of mass-"the pelvic step". We analysed the pelvic step using 20 healthy young male subjects, walking on a treadmill at 1-5. km/h, with normal or big steps. Step length, pelvis rotation amplitude, leg-pelvis relative phase, and the contribution of pelvis rotation to step length were calculated. When speed increased in normal walking, pelvis rotation changed from more out-of-phase to in-phase with the upper leg. Consequently, the contribution of pelvis rotation to step length was negative at lower speeds, switching to positive at 3. km/h. With big steps, leg and pelvis were more in-phase, and the contribution of pelvis rotation to step length was always positive, and relatively large. Still, the overall contribution of pelvis rotations to step length was small, less than 3%. Regression analysis revealed that leg-pelvis relative phase predicted about 60% of the variance of this contribution. The results of the present study suggest that, during normal slow walking, pelvis rotations increase, rather than decrease, the vertical movements of the centre of mass. With large steps, this does not happen, because leg and pelvis are in-phase at all speeds. Finally, it has been suggested that patients with hip flexion limitation may use larger pelvis rotations to increase step length. This, however, may only work as long as the pelvis rotates in-phase with the leg. © 2013 Elsevier B.V.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09666362
Volume :
39
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gait and Posture
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9ec77d909c05f5e8c972bb66d56accc7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gaitpost.2013.06.006