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UNDERSTANDING GAIT Sports Medicine II SECTA

Sports Medicine II SECTA. Normal Gait = Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

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Page 1: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

UNDERSTANDING

GAITSports Medicine II

SECTA

Page 2: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait Cycle - Definitions:

Normal Gait = Series of rhythmical , alternating movements

of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of the center of gravity

series of ‘controlled falls’

Page 3: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait Cycle - Definitions:

Gait Cycle = Single sequence of functions by one limb Begins when reference foot contacts the

ground Ends with subsequent floor contact of the

same foot

Page 4: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait Cycle - Definitions:

Step Length = Distance between corresponding successive

points of heel contact of the opposite feet

Rt step length = Lt step length (in normal gait)

Page 5: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait Cycle - Definitions:

Stride Length = Distance between successive points of heel

contact of the same foot Double the step length (in normal gait)

Page 6: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait Cycle - Definitions:

Walking Base = Side-to-side distance between the line of the

two feet Also known as ‘stride width’

Page 7: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait Cycle - Definitions:

Cadence = Number of steps per unit time Normal: 100 – 115 steps/min Cultural/social variations

Page 8: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait Cycle - Definitions:

Velocity = Distance covered by the body in unit time Usually measured in m/s Instantaneous velocity varies during the gait

cycle Average velocity (m/min) = step length (m) x

cadence (steps/min)

Comfortable Walking Speed (CWS) = Least energy consumption per unit distance Average= 80 m/min (~ 5 km/h , ~ 3 mph)

Page 9: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait Cycle - Components:

Phases:(1) Stance Phase: (2) Swing Phase:

reference limb reference limb in contact not in contact with the floor with the floor

Page 10: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait Cycle - Components:

Support:(1) Single Support: only one foot in contact with

the floor(2) Double Support: both feet in contact with floor

Page 11: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait Cycle - Subdivisions:

A. Stance phase:1. Heel contact: ‘Initial contact’

2. Foot-flat: ‘Loading response’, initial contact of forefoot w. ground

3. Midstance: greater trochanter in alignment w. vertical bisector of foot

4. Heel-off: ‘Terminal stance’

5. Toe-off: ‘Pre-swing’

Page 12: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait Cycle - Subdivisions:

B. Swing phase:1. Acceleration: ‘Initial swing’

2. Midswing: swinging limb overtakes the limb in stance

3. Deceleration: ‘Terminal swing’

Page 13: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait Cycle

Page 14: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Time Frame:A. Stance vs. Swing:

Stance phase = 60% of gait cycle

Swing phase = 40%B. Single vs. Double support:

Single support= 40% of gait cycle

Double support= 20%

Page 15: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

With increasing walking speeds: Stance phase: decreases Swing phase: increases Double support: decreases

Running: By definition: walking without double support Ratio stance/swing reverses Double support disappears. ‘Double swing’

develops

Page 16: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Path of Center of Gravity

Center of Gravity (CG): midway between the hips Few cm in front of S2

Least energy consumption if CG travels in straight line

Page 17: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

CG

Page 18: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of
Page 19: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Path of Center of Gravity

A. Vertical displacement: Rhythmic up & down

movement Highest point: midstance Lowest point: double support Average displacement: 5cm Path: extremely smooth

sinusoidal curve

Page 20: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Path of Center of Gravity

B. Lateral displacement: Rhythmic side-to-side

movement Lateral limit: midstance Average displacement: 5cm Path: extremely smooth

sinusoidal curve

Page 21: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Path of Center of Gravity

C. Overall displacement: Sum of vertical &

horizontal displacement Figure ‘8’ movement of

CG as seen from AP view

Horizontalplane

Verticalplane

Page 22: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Determinants of Gait :

Six optimizations used to minimize excursion of CG in vertical & horizontal planes

Reduce significantly energy consumption of ambulation

Page 23: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Determinants of Gait :

(1) Pelvic rotation: Forward rotation of the pelvis in the horizontal plane

approx. 8o on the swing-phase side Reduces the angle of hip flexion & extension Enables a slightly longer step-length w/o further lowering

of CG

Page 24: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Determinants of Gait :

(2) Pelvic tilt: 5o dip of the swinging side (i.e. hip adduction) Reduces the height of the apex of the curve of CG

Page 25: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Determinants of Gait :

(3) Knee flexion in stance phase: Approx. 20o dip Shortens the leg in the middle of stance phase Reduces the height of the apex of the curve of CG

Page 26: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Determinants of Gait :

(4) Ankle mechanism: Lengthens the leg at heel contact Smoothens the curve of CG Reduces the lowering of CG

Page 27: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Determinants of Gait :

(5) Foot mechanism: Lengthens the leg at toe-off as ankle moves from

dorsiflexion to plantarflexion Smoothens the curve of CG Reduces the lowering of CG

Page 28: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Determinants of Gait :

(6) Lateral displacement of body: The normally narrow width of the walking base

minimizes the lateral displacement of CG Reduced muscular energy consumption due to

reduced lateral acceleration & deceleration

Page 29: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait Analysis – Forces:

Forces which have the most significant Influence are due to:

(1) gravity(2) muscular contraction(3) inertia(4) floor reaction

Page 30: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait Analysis – Forces:

The force that the foot exerts on the floor due to gravity & inertia is opposed by the ground reaction force

Ground reaction force (RF) may be resolved into horizontal (HF) & vertical (VF) components.

Understanding joint position & RF leads to understanding of muscle activity during gait

Page 31: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait Analysis:

At initial heel-contact: ‘heel transient’ At heel-contact:

Ankle: DF Knee: Quad Hip: Glut. Max&Hamstrings

Page 32: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait

Initial HC‘Heel transient’

HC

Foot-Flat Mid-stance

Page 33: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Gait

Initial HC‘Heel transient’

HC

Heel-offToe-off

Page 34: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

GAIT

Low muscular demand: ~ 20-25% max. muscle strength

Page 35: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

COMMON GAIT ABNORMALITIES

A. Antalgic GaitB. Lateral Trunk bendingC. Functional Leg-Length DiscrepancyD. Increased Walking BaseE. Inadequate Dorsiflexion ControlF. Excessive Knee Extension

Page 36: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

“ Don’t walk behind me, I may not lead. Don’t walk ahead of me, I may not follow. Walk next to me and be my friend.”

Albert Camus

Page 37: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

COMMON GAIT ABNORMALITIES: A. Antalgic Gait

Gait pattern in which stance phase on affected side is shortened

Corresponding increase in stance on unaffected side

Common causes: OA, Fx, tendinitis

Page 38: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

COMMON GAIT ABNORMALITIES: B. Lateral Trunk bending

Trendelenberg gait Usually unilateral Bilateral = waddling gait Common causes:

A. Painful hipB. Hip abductor weaknessC. Leg-length discrepancyD. Abnormal hip joint

Page 39: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Ex. 2: Hip abductor load & hip joint reaction force

Page 40: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Ex. 2: Hip abductor load & hip joint reaction force

Page 41: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

COMMON GAIT ABNORMALITIES: C. Functional Leg-Length Discrepancy

Swing leg: longer than stance leg 4 common compensations:

A. CircumductionB. Hip hikingC. SteppageD. Vaulting

Page 42: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

COMMON GAIT ABNORMALITIES: D. Increased Walking Base

Normal walking base: 5-10 cm Common causes:

Deformities Abducted hip Valgus knee

Instability Cerebellar ataxia Proprioception deficits

Page 43: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

COMMON GAIT ABNORMALITIES: E. Inadequate Dorsiflexion Control

In stance phase (Heel contact – Foot flat):Foot slap

In swing phase (mid-swing): Toe drag

Causes: Weak Tibialis Ant. Spastic plantarflexors

Page 44: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

COMMON GAIT ABNORMALITIES: F. Excessive knee extension

Loss of normal knee flexion during stance phase

Knee may go into hyperextension Genu recurvatum: hyperextension

deformity of knee Common causes:

Quadriceps weakness (mid-stance) Quadriceps spasticity (mid-stance) Knee flexor weakness (end-stance)

* * *

Page 45: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Other Abnormalities:Overpronation

Pronation is the movement of the subtalar joint (between the talus and calcaneus) into: Eversion (turning the

sole outwards) Dorsiflexion (pointing

the toes upwards) and Abduction (pointing the

toes out to the side Overpronation is often

recognized as a flattening or rolling in of the foot

Page 46: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Other Abnormalities:Overpronation

Shin Splints Anterior Compartment Syndrome Patello-femoral Pain Sydrome Plantar Fasciitis Tarsal tunnel Syndrome Bunions (Hallux Valgus) Achilles Tendonitis

Page 47: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Other AbnormalitiesOversupination

Supination is a movement at the foot which is a necessary movement for walking and running amongst other activities

Supination is the movement of the subtalar joint (between the talus and calcaneus) into: Inversion (turning the sole

inwards) Plantarflexion (pointing the

toes away from you) and Adduction (pointing the

toes across your body).

Page 48: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Other AbnormalitiesOversupination

Oversupination (hyper-supination) is far more rare than overpronation and causes problems for runners and other athletes, as in this position the foot is less able to provide shock absorption. Shin Splints Plantar Fasciitis Ankle Sprains Stress fractures of the tibia, calcaneus and

metatarsals

Page 49: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Other Abnormalities

Propulsive gait -- a stooped, stiff posture with the head and neck bent forward

Carbon monoxide poisoning Manganese poisoning Parkinson’s disease Use of certain drugs including phenothiazines,

haloperidol, thiothixene, loxapine, and metoclopramide (usually drug effects are temporary)

Page 50: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Other Abnormalities

Scissors gait -- legs flexed slightly at the hips and knees like crouching, with the knees and thighs hitting or crossing in a scissors-like movement

Brain abscess Brain or head trauma Brain tumor Cerebrovascular accident Cerebral palsy Cervical spondylosis Liver failure Multiple sclerosis Spinal cord trauma Spinal cord tumor

Page 51: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Other Abnormalities

Spastic gait -- a stiff, foot-dragging walk caused by a long muscle contraction on one side

Brain abscess Brain or head trauma Brain tumor Cerebrovascular accident Cerebral palsy Cervical spondylosis Liver failure Multiple sclerosis Spinal cord trauma Spinal cord tumor

Page 52: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Other Abnormalities

Steppage gait -- foot drop where the foot hangs with the toes pointing down, causing the toes to scrape the ground while walking, requiring someone to lift the leg higher than normal when walking

Herniated lumbar disk Multiple sclerosis Muscle weakness of the tibia Spinal cord injury

Page 53: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Other Abnormalities

Waddling gait -- a duck-like walk that may appear in childhood or later in life

Muscle disease (myopathy) Spinal muscle atrophy Muscular dystropy Congenital hip dysplasia

Page 54: Sports Medicine II SECTA.  Normal Gait =  Series of rhythmical, alternating movements of the trunk & limbs which result in the forward progression of

Other Abnormalities

Ataxic or broad-based gait

Alcohol intoxication Brain injury Damage to nerve cells in the cerebellum of the brain

(cerebellar degeneration) Medications (phenytoin and other seizure medications) Polyneuropathy (damage to many nerves, as occurs with

diabetes) Stroke