Abstract

Healthy people can walk nearly effortlessly thanks to their instinctively adaptive gait patterns that tend to minimize metabolic energy consumption. However, the economy of gait is severely impaired in many neurological disorders such as stroke or cerebral palsy (CP). Moreover, self-selected asymmetry of impaired gait does not seem to unequivocally coincide with the minimal energy cost, suggesting the presence of other adaptive origins. Here, we used hemiparetic CP gait as a model to test the hypothesis that pathological asymmetric gait patterns are chosen to equalize the relative muscle efforts between the affected and unaffected limbs. We determined the relative muscle efforts for the ankle and knee extensors by relating extensor joint moments during gait to maximum moments obtained from all-out hopping reference test. During asymmetric CP gait, the unaffected limb generated greater ankle (1.36±0.15 vs 1.17±0.16 Nm/kg, p = 0.002) and knee (0.74±0.33 vs 0.44±0.19 Nm/kg, p = 0.007) extensor moments compared with the affected limb. Similarly, the maximum moment generation capacity was greater in the unaffected limb versus the affected limb (ankle extensors: 1.81±0.39 Nm/kg vs 1.51±0.34 Nm/kg, p = 0.033; knee extensors: 1.83±0.37 Nm/kg vs 1.34±0.38 Nm/kg, p = 0.021) in our force reference test. As a consequence, no differences were found in the relative efforts between unaffected and affected limb ankle extensors (77±12% vs 80±16%, p = 0.69) and knee extensors (41±17% vs 38±23%, p = 0.54). In conclusion, asymmetric CP gait resulted in similar relative muscle efforts between affected and unaffected limbs. The tendency for effort equalization may thus be an important driver of self-selected gait asymmetry patterns, and consequently advantageous for preventing fatigue of the weaker affected side musculature.

Highlights

  • Understanding the key determinants of compensatory gait strategies are of critical importance to our attempts to develop better gait rehabilitation strategies

  • A notable gait asymmetry was present in the limb extensor moments, where 16% (p = 0.002), 68% (p = 0.007) and 25% (p = 0.020) greater values were found at the unaffected ankle, knee and hip, respectively, compared to the affected limb (Fig 1, Table 1)

  • In line with our effort equalization hypothesis, children with hemiplegic cerebral palsy (CP) demonstrated similar relative ankle and knee extensor muscle effort levels in the affected and unaffected lower limbs during gait, even though these muscle groups were much weaker in the affected limb in our hopping reference test

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Summary

Objectives

The purpose of this study is to clarify our understanding of the underlying factors behind gait asymmetry

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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