Abstract

BackgroundSeveral investigations have studied gait variability of individuals with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) deficiency; however, the effect of dual-tasking on the gait variability of these individuals remained unclear. The aim of the present study was to determine the effect of gait speed and dual-tasking on knee flexion–extension variability in subjects with and without ACL deficiency. MethodsThe knee flexion–extension Lyapunov exponent (LyE) was measured in 22 ACL-deficient (Mean±SD) (25.95 ± 4.69 years) and 22 healthy subjects (24.18 ± 3.32 years). They walked at three levels of gait speed in isolation or concurrently with a cognitive task. ResultsRepeated-measure analyses of variance (ANOVAs) demonstrated that the interaction of group by gait speed was statistically significant. As the gait speed increased from low to high, the knee flexion–extension LyE significantly decreased for the subjects with ACL deficiency (effect size: 0.57, P = 0.01). The interaction of group by cognitive load was not statistically significant (P = 0.07). In addition, the ACL-deficient subjects had statistically slower reaction times than healthy subjects during the dual-task compared with the single-task condition. ConclusionsThe ACL-deficient and healthy individuals had a tendency to maintain safe gait. It seems that the ACL-deficient subjects sacrificed the cognitive task more than the healthy individuals to pay more attention toward gait. Additionally, it seems that the gait speed was more challenging than cognitive load on the stride-to-stride variability in the individuals with ACL deficiency.

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