Exploring the utility of dynamic motor control to assess recovery following pediatric traumatic brain injury: A pilot study
Nanette Aldahondo, Andrew J. Ries, Amy Schulz, Michael H. Schwartz

TL;DR
This pilot study explores a new method called walk-DMC to assess neurological recovery in children after traumatic brain injury, showing it may detect subtle impairments that traditional tests miss.
Contribution
The study introduces walk-DMC as a novel tool to directly measure neurological recovery in pediatric traumatic brain injury patients.
Findings
Walk-DMC identified persistent neurological impairment in two participants not captured by standard clinical measures.
Standard clinical measures showed recovery to nondisabled ranges, while walk-DMC scores remained impaired in some cases.
Walk-DMC shows promise as a more sensitive indicator of neurological recovery post-injury.
Abstract
Pediatric traumatic brain injury often leads to long-term disability. Unfortunately, while currently used standard clinical measures can effectively capture secondary functional impairments, they do not measure neurologic impairment directly. Therefore, the objective of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of walking dynamic motor control (walk-DMC) assessments to more directly measure neurological impairment and recovery for individuals post-traumatic brain injury. To accomplish this, we assessed the trajectory of walk-DMC (a single summary measure that reflects the overall complexity of muscle activation patterns during walking) and standard clinical measures of balance, mobility, and function in a small cohort of individuals post-traumatic brain injury at different time points post-injury (during acute rehabilitation, short- and long-term follow-up). At enrollment all…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTraumatic Brain Injury Research · Stroke Rehabilitation and Recovery · Traumatic Brain Injury and Neurovascular Disturbances
