Inclined treadmill walking kinetics of the non-paretic leg in early post-stroke survivors: an observational case-control study
Jiani Lu, Yun Miao, Dingying Ma, Lihua Chen, Bo Yu, Jung H. Chien

TL;DR
This study examines how early post-stroke survivors use their non-paretic leg during incline treadmill walking, revealing compensatory strategies and reduced force generation compared to healthy individuals.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into non-paretic leg mechanics during incline walking in early post-stroke survivors, highlighting the need for targeted rehabilitation.
Findings
Stroke survivors showed lower vertical ground reaction force peaks and impulses in the non-paretic leg compared to controls during incline walking.
Inclined walking increased F1 and decreased F2 for both groups, but stroke survivors showed reduced F3, indicating impaired push-off mechanics.
The study suggests rehabilitation should focus on motor control and force steadiness in both legs to improve walking efficiency.
Abstract
Stroke remains the primary source of prolonged disability worldwide since it often results in gait asymmetry. Research shows compensatory mechanisms in chronic stroke patients’ non-paretic legs but lacks knowledge about these adaptations during the early post-stroke period when walking on inclines which mimic real-world mobility challenges. This study sought to clarify the compensatory strategies in the non-paretic leg of early post-stroke survivors by analyzing the changes in vertical ground reaction force (GRF) profiles and respective variabilities during level (0%) and inclined (6%) treadmill walking, relative to healthy, matched controls. The study included fourteen early post-stroke survivors who were three months post-event or less along with fourteen matched controls. Participants walked at their preferred speeds on treadmill at 0% and 6% grade incline settings. Researchers…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBalance, Gait, and Falls Prevention · Stroke Rehabilitation and Recovery · Muscle activation and electromyography studies
