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Instrumentally assessed gait quality is more relevant than gait endurance and velocity to explain patient‐reported walking ability in early‐stage multiple sclerosis

Authors :
Ilaria Carpinella
Andrea Tacchino
Rachele Di Giovanni
Davide Cattaneo
Elisa Gervasoni
Claudio Solaro
Maurizio Ferrarin
Marco Rovaris
P. Confalonieri
Denise Anastasi
Giampaolo Brichetto
Source :
European Journal of Neurology. 28:2259-2268
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE People with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) often report walking limitations even when the gold standard Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) indicates normal walking endurance/autonomy. The present multicenter study on early-stage PwMS aims at analyzing which aspects are associated with patient-reported walking limitations measured with the 12-item Multiple Sclerosis Walking Scale (MSWS-12). METHODS Eighty-two PwMS (EDSS ≤ 2.5) were assessed using the Fullerton Advanced Balance Scale-short (FAB-s), the Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS) and the 6-min Walk Test (6MWT), the latter administered also to 21 healthy subjects. Participants performed the 6MWT wearing three inertial sensors on ankles and trunk. Instrumented metrics describing gait velocity (stride length and frequency) and quality (regularity, symmetry, instability) were computed from sensor data. Fatigue (FSS), balance (FAB-s), walking endurance (6MWT) and instrumented metrics were entered in a multiple regression model with MSWS-12 as dependent variable. RESULTS Gait symmetry, gait instability, fatigue and balance were significantly associated with self-rated walking ability, whilst walking endurance and velocity were not. Fatigue, balance, gait symmetry and instability were more impaired in participants reporting mild-to-moderate (MSMM-PWL , 25 ≤ MSWS-12

Details

ISSN :
14681331 and 13515101
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e4cf9c6a192aa0d73e784c0ae1ef8bdd