Rigid Ankle Foot Orthosis Deteriorates Mediolateral Balance Control and Vertical Braking during Gait Initiation

Rigid ankle-foot orthoses (AFO) are commonly used for impeding foot drop during the swing phase of gait. They also reduce pain and improve gait kinematics in patients with weakness or loss of integrity of ankle-foot complex structures due to various pathological conditions. However, this comes at th...

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Main Authors: Arnaud Delafontaine, Olivier Gagey, Silvia Colnaghi, Manh-Cuong Do, Jean-Louis Honeine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-04-01
Series:Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnhum.2017.00214/full
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spelling doaj-8775aa8c9cbf430c86fc1b37d116b4722020-11-25T02:02:58ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Human Neuroscience1662-51612017-04-011110.3389/fnhum.2017.00214249921Rigid Ankle Foot Orthosis Deteriorates Mediolateral Balance Control and Vertical Braking during Gait InitiationArnaud Delafontaine0Olivier Gagey1Olivier Gagey2Silvia Colnaghi3Manh-Cuong Do4Jean-Louis Honeine5CIAMS, Université Paris-Sud Université Paris-Saclay, Orsay, France; CIAMS, Université d’OrléansOrléans, FranceCIAMS, Université Paris-Sud Université Paris-Saclay, Orsay, France; CIAMS, Université d’OrléansOrléans, FranceService de Chirurgie Orthopédique, C.H.U Kremlin BicêtreKremlin Bicêtre, FranceCSAM Laboratory, Department of Public Health, University of PaviaPavia, ItalyCIAMS, Université Paris-Sud Université Paris-Saclay, Orsay, France; CIAMS, Université d’OrléansOrléans, FranceCSAM Laboratory, Department of Public Health, University of PaviaPavia, ItalyRigid ankle-foot orthoses (AFO) are commonly used for impeding foot drop during the swing phase of gait. They also reduce pain and improve gait kinematics in patients with weakness or loss of integrity of ankle-foot complex structures due to various pathological conditions. However, this comes at the price of constraining ankle joint mobility, which might affect propulsive force generation and balance control. The present study examined the effects of wearing an AFO on biomechanical variables and electromyographic activity of tibialis anterior (TA) and soleus muscles during gait initiation (GI). Nineteen healthy adults participated in the study. They initiated gait at a self-paced speed with no ankle constraint as well as wearing an AFO on the stance leg, or bilaterally. Constraining the stance leg ankle decreased TA activity ipsilaterally during the anticipatory postural adjustment (APA) of GI, and ipsilateral soleus activity during step execution. In the sagittal plane, the decrease in the stance leg TA activity reduced the backward displacement of the center of pressure (CoP) resulting in a reduction of the forward velocity of the center of mass (CoM) measured at foot contact (FC). In the frontal plane, wearing the AFO reduced the displacement of the CoP in the direction of the swing leg during the APA phase. The mediolateral velocity of the CoM increased during single-stance prompting a larger step width to recover balance. During step execution, the CoM vertical downward velocity is normally reduced in order to lessen the impact of the swing leg with the floor and facilitates the rise of the CoM that occurs during the subsequent double-support phase. The reduction in stance leg soleus activity caused by constraining the ankle weakened the vertical braking of the CoM during step execution. This caused the absolute instantaneous vertical velocity of the CoM at FC to be greater in the constrained conditions with respect to the control condition. From a rehabilitation perspective, passively- or actively-powered assistive AFOs could correct for the reduction in muscle activity and enhance balance control during GI of patients.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnhum.2017.00214/fullankle-foot orthosisankle rigiditygait initiationbalance controlvertical braking
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Arnaud Delafontaine
Olivier Gagey
Olivier Gagey
Silvia Colnaghi
Manh-Cuong Do
Jean-Louis Honeine
spellingShingle Arnaud Delafontaine
Olivier Gagey
Olivier Gagey
Silvia Colnaghi
Manh-Cuong Do
Jean-Louis Honeine
Rigid Ankle Foot Orthosis Deteriorates Mediolateral Balance Control and Vertical Braking during Gait Initiation
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
ankle-foot orthosis
ankle rigidity
gait initiation
balance control
vertical braking
author_facet Arnaud Delafontaine
Olivier Gagey
Olivier Gagey
Silvia Colnaghi
Manh-Cuong Do
Jean-Louis Honeine
author_sort Arnaud Delafontaine
title Rigid Ankle Foot Orthosis Deteriorates Mediolateral Balance Control and Vertical Braking during Gait Initiation
title_short Rigid Ankle Foot Orthosis Deteriorates Mediolateral Balance Control and Vertical Braking during Gait Initiation
title_full Rigid Ankle Foot Orthosis Deteriorates Mediolateral Balance Control and Vertical Braking during Gait Initiation
title_fullStr Rigid Ankle Foot Orthosis Deteriorates Mediolateral Balance Control and Vertical Braking during Gait Initiation
title_full_unstemmed Rigid Ankle Foot Orthosis Deteriorates Mediolateral Balance Control and Vertical Braking during Gait Initiation
title_sort rigid ankle foot orthosis deteriorates mediolateral balance control and vertical braking during gait initiation
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
issn 1662-5161
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Rigid ankle-foot orthoses (AFO) are commonly used for impeding foot drop during the swing phase of gait. They also reduce pain and improve gait kinematics in patients with weakness or loss of integrity of ankle-foot complex structures due to various pathological conditions. However, this comes at the price of constraining ankle joint mobility, which might affect propulsive force generation and balance control. The present study examined the effects of wearing an AFO on biomechanical variables and electromyographic activity of tibialis anterior (TA) and soleus muscles during gait initiation (GI). Nineteen healthy adults participated in the study. They initiated gait at a self-paced speed with no ankle constraint as well as wearing an AFO on the stance leg, or bilaterally. Constraining the stance leg ankle decreased TA activity ipsilaterally during the anticipatory postural adjustment (APA) of GI, and ipsilateral soleus activity during step execution. In the sagittal plane, the decrease in the stance leg TA activity reduced the backward displacement of the center of pressure (CoP) resulting in a reduction of the forward velocity of the center of mass (CoM) measured at foot contact (FC). In the frontal plane, wearing the AFO reduced the displacement of the CoP in the direction of the swing leg during the APA phase. The mediolateral velocity of the CoM increased during single-stance prompting a larger step width to recover balance. During step execution, the CoM vertical downward velocity is normally reduced in order to lessen the impact of the swing leg with the floor and facilitates the rise of the CoM that occurs during the subsequent double-support phase. The reduction in stance leg soleus activity caused by constraining the ankle weakened the vertical braking of the CoM during step execution. This caused the absolute instantaneous vertical velocity of the CoM at FC to be greater in the constrained conditions with respect to the control condition. From a rehabilitation perspective, passively- or actively-powered assistive AFOs could correct for the reduction in muscle activity and enhance balance control during GI of patients.
topic ankle-foot orthosis
ankle rigidity
gait initiation
balance control
vertical braking
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnhum.2017.00214/full
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