Abstract

Objective Intermittent claudication (IC) is a pathological symptom with a particular effect on human gait patterns. Therefore, analyzing these patterns can facilitate rehabilitation or treatment through comparison of the values of kinematic and kinetic variables of patients with the normal values of healthy people. Therefore, the aim of this study was to find differences in the values of gait variables between patients with IC and healthy people. Methods The study included 98 patients diagnosed with peripheral arterial disease with IC. The patients traveled a distance of 6 m at a voluntary gait velocity. Ground reaction forces while the foot contacted the ground and kinematic variables of lower limb movements were recorded. The values of normal gait variables were computed based on the results obtained in a group of 30 healthy people. Results Patients used a gait velocity below the norm for healthy people. The velocity during the lower limb swing and the step and stride length in patients with IC were below the norm. Differences were also found in the ranges of motion between patients with IC and healthy people for the pelvic obliquity, pelvic rotation, hip flexion-extension, hip abduction-adduction, hip internal-external rotation, knee flexion-extension, ankle dorsi-plantar flexion, and foot progression angles. Conclusions The presented kinematic and kinetic characteristics measured by gait variables suggest differences between patients with IC and healthy people. Considering kinematic and kinetic gait variables during the rehabilitation process would facilitate the development of a more economic gait technique (with increased stride length and range of motion in the lower limb joints) to obtain the desired rehabilitation effects. Patients with IC should receive rehabilitation oriented towards improving mobility and increasing muscle strength in selected lower limb joints to increase gait velocity and stride length.

Highlights

  • As a basic form of human locomotion, gait is an efficient method of body movement

  • Significant differences were recorded between the gait velocity of patients with Intermittent claudication (IC) and the normal values

  • Patients were characterized by gait velocity below the norm for healthy people

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Summary

Introduction

As a basic form of human locomotion, gait is an efficient method of body movement. Gait velocity is a mathematical product of mean step length and step frequency. Human gait is characterized by relatively low vertical movement velocities. Displacement of the center of mass of the human body occurs by means of cyclic movements of the lower limbs marked by repeated accelerations and decelerations. A cyclic movement of human body segments with respect to specific joints can be recorded by cinematographic methods under laboratory conditions [1]. Analysis of human gait movement patterns can be helpful in the process of rehabilitation or treatment through comparison of the values of kinematic and kinetic variables of patients with the norms for healthy people. Some gait variables can show interindividual differences depending on age, sex, diseases, or injuries [2]

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