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Research Papers

Comparing spatiotemporal gait parameters between overground walking and self-paced treadmill walking in persons after stroke

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon, , ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 1016-1021 | Received 18 Jul 2021, Accepted 19 Feb 2022, Published online: 25 Mar 2022
 

Abstract

Purpose

Since self-paced treadmills enable more natural gait patterns compared to fixed-speed treadmills we examined the use of a self-paced treadmill as a alternative for overground gait analysis in persons after stroke.

Material and methods

Twenty-five persons after stroke (10 males/15 females; 53 ± 12.05 years; 40.72 ± 42.94 months post-stroke) walked at self-selected speed overground (GAITRite, CIR Systems) and on a self-paced treadmill (GRAIL, Motek) in randomized order. Spatiotemporal parameters, variability and symmetry measures were compared using paired-sample t-tests or Wilcoxon Signed Rank tests. Concurrent validity was assessed using intraclass correlation coefficients and Bland-Altman plots. A regression model determined the contribution of the walking velocity to the changes in spatiotemporal parameters.

Results

The velocity on the treadmill was significant lower compared to overground (p < 0.001). This difference predicted the significant changes in other spatiotemporal parameters to varying degrees (27.7%–83.8%). Bland-Altman plots showed large percentage of bias and limits of agreement. Variability and symmetry measures were similar between conditions.

Conclusions

When considering gait analysis in persons after stroke a self-paced treadmill may be a valuable alternative for overground analysis. Although a slower walking velocity, and accompanying changes in other spatiotemporal parameters, should be taken into account compared to overground walking.

    Implications for rehabilitation

  • Considering the advantages regarding space and time, instrumented treadmills provide opportunities for gait assessment and training in a stroke population.

  • When using self-paced treadmills for clinical gait analysis in persons after stroke, the slower walking velocity and accompanying changes in other spatiotemporal parameters need to be taken into account.

  • Stroke patients seem to preserve their walking pattern on a self-paced treadmill.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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