Abstract

Minimum toe clearance (MTC) is thought to quantify the risk of the toe contacting the ground during the swing phase of gait and initiating a trip, but there are methodological issues with this measure and the risk of trip-related falls has been shown to also be associated with gait speed and dynamic stability. This paper proposes and evaluates a new measure, trip risk integral (TRI), that circumvents many issues with MTC as typically calculated at a single point by considering minimum foot clearance across the entire swing phase and taking into account dynamic stability to estimate risk of falling due to a trip rather than risk of the foot contacting the floor. Shoes and floor surfaces were digitized and MTC and TRI calculated for unimpaired younger (N=14, age=26±5), unimpaired older (N=14, age=73±7), and older adults who had recently fallen (N=11, age=72±5) walking on surfaces with no obstacles, visible obstacles, and hidden obstacles at slow, preferred, and fast gait speeds. MTC and TRI had significant (F≥5, p≤0.005) but differing effects of gait speed and floor surface. As gait speed increased (which increases risk of trip-related falls) MTC indicated less and TRI greater risk, indicating that TRI better quantifies risk of falling due to a trip. While MTC and TRI did not differ by subject group, strong speed-related effects of TRI (F≥8, p≤0.0007) resulted in improved TRI for fallers due to their slower self-selected preferred gait. This demonstrates that slower gait is both an important covariate and potential intervention for trip-related falls.

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