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Ambulation and Aids

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Create (concentric), decelerate (eccentric), and stabilize (isometric) motion ... Decelerators: hamstrings work eccentrically in swing and concentric in early stance ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ambulation and Aids


1
Ambulation and Aids
  • CHAPTER 12

2
Locomtion
  • Method used to move from one place to another
  • Normal gait has similarities
  • Differences from
  • Postural variation
  • Weaknesses
  • Structural abnormalities
  • Soft tissue length alterations

3
Gait cycle
  • Stance phase
  • Foot is in contact with ground
  • 60-62 of gait cycle
  • Fist and last 10 of phase is in double limb
    support
  • Phases
  • Heel strike
  • Foot flat
  • Mid-stance
  • Heel off
  • Toe off
  • Swing phase
  • Foot is not weight bearing
  • 38-40 of gait cycle
  • Phases
  • Early swing (acceleration)
  • Mid-swing
  • Late swing (deceleration)

4
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5
Stride terminology
  • Stride length heel strike to heel strike on
    same foot
  • Step length heel strike on one foot to heel
    strike of other foot
  • Stride width midline of one foot at mid-stance
    to other foot
  • Large variation in walking rate

6
COG pathway
  • COG movement kept to minimum by
  • Multi-joint system
  • Controlling force/momentum
  • Absorption of shock/impact
  • Movement is sinusoidal in nature
  • Wheels would be better than legs!

7
Gait determinants (link)
  • Pelvic rotation 4? toward stepping leg
  • Pelvic tilt 4- 5? in down in mid-stance toward
    swing leg
  • Knee flexion extended at heel strike, but
    flexes 15? by mid-stance
  • Ankle motion its COG is highest when knee COG is
    lowest to smooth curve
  • Lateral pelvic motion shifts COG over support
    leg max shift at mid-stance

8
Gait kinematics (joints)
  • Trunk and upper extremities
  • Trunk movement coordinated with pelvis
  • Trunk rotates opposite of pelvis
  • Arm swing assists trunk rotation
  • Pelvis 4? A/P tilt, 8? lateral tilt, and 8?
    rotation
  • Hip 43? flex/ext, 13? ab/add and 8? rotation
  • Knee 60? flexion and 18? tibial rotation
  • Ankle foot and ankle work together to absorb
    shock and balance over uneven ground

9
Gait kinetics (muscles)
  • Create (concentric), decelerate (eccentric), and
    stabilize (isometric) motion
  • Cyclic activity with rest periods
  • More energy needed in stance phase than swing
  • Acceleration and deceleration require most
  • Shock absorbers quads and foot extensors work
    eccentrically
  • Stabilizers hip extensors and torso muscles keep
    trunk erect and prevent excessive pelvic tilt
  • Accelerators posterior calf muscles and ankle
    inverters/everters
  • Decelerators hamstrings work eccentrically in
    swing and concentric in early stance

10
Ground reaction forces
  • Shear occurs A/P and M/L
  • Initial contact force is forward, but reverses
    after mid-stance
  • Shortening stride length reduces A/P shear
  • M/L shear occurs as weight is transferred forward
    on foot
  • Greatest vertical force at toe off most in
    double support

11
Pathological gait (link)
  • Results from injury, weakness, loss of ROM, pain,
    bad habits
  • Look at
  • Stride length
  • Stride width
  • Cadence
  • Trunk lean
  • Arm swing
  • Also observe
  • Head position
  • Shoulder vs. hip alignment
  • Foot/heel positions
  • Gluteus medius gait trunk laterally over weak
    hip
  • Quadriceps gait knee kept extended through
    stance phase (lurch!)
  • Ankle tightness reduced dorsiflexion hip
    hiking common
  • Painful knee shorten or circumducted stride
    increased flex at mid-stance and decreased during
    swing

12
Normal running gait
  • Mechanics affected by??
  • Running stride toe off on one foot to toe off
    on other
  • Running cycle two running strides
  • Stride length and cadence increase with velocity
  • Ground reaction force increases with speed
  • Softer surfaces eliminate peak impact
  • Single vs. double impact

13
Normal running gait
  • Stance phase shorter
  • Swing phase longer
  • No double-support
  • Nonsupport phase (float)
  • COG lowers as speed increases
  • Hip and knee never fully extend
  • Faster runners land on midfoot (slower on
    rearfoot)
  • Trunk lean increases from 4? to 7? to 11.6?

14
Assistive devices
  • Fitting crutches and cane
  • Gait patterns
  • Tripod/swing NWB
  • Three-point PWB to FWB
  • Four-point FWB
  • Single support
  • Up-stairs
  • Down-stairs
  • Ramps
  • Transfers
  • Precautions
  • Check equipment
  • Environmental factors
  • Dont be an obstacle!
  • Crutch palsy
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