Effects of personal and task constraints on limb coordination during walking: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Title
Effects of personal and task constraints on limb coordination during walking: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Publication Date
2019-01
Author(s)
Shafizadeh, Mohsen
Crowther, Robert
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7410-1101
Email: rcrowth2@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:rcrowth2
Wheat, Jonathan
Davids, Keith
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Place of publication
United Kingdom
DOI
10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2018.10.024
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/64396
Abstract

Background: In human behaviour, emergence of movement patterns is shaped by different, interacting constraints and consequently, individuals with motor disorders usually display distinctive lower limb coordination modes.

Objectives: To review existing evidence on the effects of motor disorders and different task constraints on emergent coordination patterns during walking, and to examine the clinical significance of task constraints on gait coordination in people with motor disorders.

Methods: The search included CINHAL Plus, MEDLINE, HSNAE, SPORTDiscus, Scopus, Pubmed and AMED. We included studies that compared intra-limb and inter-limb coordination during gait between individuals with a motor disorder and able-bodied individuals, and under different task constraints. Two reviewers independently examined the quality of studies by using the Newcastle Ottawa Scale-cohort study.

Findings: From the search results, we identified 1416 articles that studied gait patterns and further analysis resulted in 33 articles for systematic review and 18 articles for meta-analysis-1, and 10 articles for meta-analysis2. In total, the gait patterns of 539 patients and 358 able-bodied participants were analysed in the sampled studies. Results of the meta-analysis for group comparisons revealed a low effect size for group differences (ES = −0.24), and a moderate effect size for task interventions (ES = −0.53), on limb coordination during gait.

Interpretation: Findings demonstrated that motor disorders can be considered as an individual constraint, significantly altering gait patterns. These findings suggest that gait should be interpreted as functional adaptation to changing personal constraints, rather than as an abnormality. Results imply that designing gait interventions, through modifying locomotion tasks, can facilitate the emergent re-organization of inter-limb coordination patterns during rehabilitation.

Link
Citation
Clinical Biomechanics, v.61, p. 1-10
ISBN
1879-1271
0268-0033
Start page
1
End page
10

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