Comparison of Soleus H-Reflex Modulation After Incomplete Spinal Cord Injury in 2 Walking Environments: Treadmill With Body Weight Support and Overground
Abstract Phadke CP, Wu SS, Thompson FJ, Behrman AL. Comparison of soleus H-reflex modulation after incomplete spinal cord injury in 2 walking environments: treadmill with body weight support and overground. Objective To investigate a walking environment effect on soleus H-reflex modulation during wa...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation 2007-12, Vol.88 (12), p.1606-1613 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract Phadke CP, Wu SS, Thompson FJ, Behrman AL. Comparison of soleus H-reflex modulation after incomplete spinal cord injury in 2 walking environments: treadmill with body weight support and overground. Objective To investigate a walking environment effect on soleus H-reflex modulation during walking in persons with motor incomplete spinal cord injury (SCI) and noninjured controls. Design Pretest and posttest repeated-measures quasi-experimental controlled design. Setting Locomotor training laboratory. Participants Eight adults with incomplete SCI and 8 noninjured age- and speed-matched controls. Intervention Walking overground with a customary assistive device and brace at a self-selected, comfortable walking speed was compared with walking on treadmill with 40% body weight support (BWS) and manual trainers for leg and trunk movement guidance. Main Outcome Measure Mean soleus H-reflex amplitude (H/M ratio) was recorded during midstance and midswing phases of walking. Results The H/M ratio was 33% smaller in stance phase ( P =.078) and 56% smaller in the swing phase ( P =.008) of walking on the treadmill with BWS and manual assistance compared with overground in the incomplete SCI group. The H/M ratio in the incomplete SCI group was significantly greater compared with noninjured controls in the stance and swing phases of overground walking ( P =.001, P =.007, respectively). Soleus H-reflex modulation in the 2 walking environments did not differ significantly in the noninjured population. Conclusions Training walking on a treadmill with BWS and manual assistance to approximate the kinematics and spatiotemporal pattern of walking may be a more optimal environment to aid in normalizing reflex modulation after incomplete SCI when compared with conventional gait training overground. |
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ISSN: | 0003-9993 1532-821X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.apmr.2007.07.031 |