Abstract

ABSTRACT Chronic ankle instability (CAI) patients often present with centrally-mediated neuromuscular adaptations. Gluteal thickness measures derived from ultrasound imaging (USI) have been correlated to hip biomechanical measures during walking among healthy individuals, however these relationships remain unexplored among CAI patients. The purpose of this study was to compare USI-derived gluteus maximus and medius thickness measures to tri-planar hip kinematics, kinetics, and gluteus medius surface electromyography (sEMG) amplitude during walking among CAI patients. Fifteen females with CAI walked on a treadmill while USI, hip tri-planar kinematics, kinetics, and sEMG were synchronously recorded. Cross-correlation analyses were conducted at 1% intervals (11-ms) from −20% to 20% in the gait cycle. Gluteus medius thickness measures were associated with frontal plane kinematics at a 99-ms lag (cross-correlation coefficient [CCF]: −0.61), transverse plane kinematics at a 66-ms lag (CCF: −0.69), and with hip kinetics at 110-ms lags (CCF: 0.51–0.55). Gluteus medius thickness measures followed sEMG amplitudes by 143-ms (CCF: 0.22). Gluteus maximus thickness was associated with sagittal kinematics at a 220-ms lag (CCF: −0.70), and thickness changes preceded sagittal kinetics at 200-ms (0.87). Compared to reference healthy data, the CAI group presented with differing lag times between USI-derived measures and hip biomechanics, suggesting neuromechanical alterations during walking.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call