Crouch gait or flexed-knee gait in cerebral palsy: Is there a difference? A systematic review
•Crouch gait and flexed knee gait are essentially synonymous terms.•Definitions of both predominantly focused on knee position.•27 % of papers provided no definition of the gait pattern.•Definitions should specify objective knee position, rationale and period in the gait cycle.•Gait analysis societi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Gait & posture 2020-10, Vol.82, p.153-160 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Crouch gait and flexed knee gait are essentially synonymous terms.•Definitions of both predominantly focused on knee position.•27 % of papers provided no definition of the gait pattern.•Definitions should specify objective knee position, rationale and period in the gait cycle.•Gait analysis societies may have a role in defining common gait patterns in CP.
Crouch or flexed-knee gait is one of the most common pathological gait patterns in cerebral palsy (CP). Differences exist in definitions used; the degree of knee flexion, inclusion of hip or ankle position, and timing in the gait cycle. This ambiguity may be responsible for variations in prevalence rates and difficulty comparing data across studies.
What are the kinematic parameters used to define crouch or flexed-knee gait in CP gait? A secondary aim was to examine the quality of data reporting, focusing on the sample characteristics, inclusion/exclusion criteria and the choice of limb included for analysis.
Articles included in this review reported on a specified cohort of adults or children with crouch or flexed-knee gait assessed with 3-dimensional gait analysis. A customised data extraction and quality assessment table was designed specific to the research question.
The majority (75 %) of included studies used the term crouch gait. Where the pattern was defined, 80 % of crouch papers and 94 % of flexed-knee gait papers based this solely on knee position. Kinematic parameters were clearly defined when they provided objective values of knee flexion, supported this with rationale and provided a reference point in the gait cycle. Only 22 % of crouch papers and 19 % of flexed-knee gait papers provided this information. The majority of studies (67 % crouch; 90 % flexed-knee) specified which limb(s) were included for analysis with the majority including both limbs. Objective values of knee flexion ranged from 8 o to 30 o.
This review highlights that crouch and flexed knee are synonymous and ambiguity exists in the kinematic definition making it difficult to make compare data amongst study cohorts. Future research should provide detailed definitions including the threshold value of knee flexion, how it was derived, the timing in the gait cycle and the limb(s) included in analysis. |
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ISSN: | 0966-6362 1879-2219 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2020.09.001 |