ABSTRACT
Purpose
Determine how mobility changes over 6 months in people unable to walk at 8-weeks post-Acquired Brain Injury (ABI); if there is an association over time between postural alignment and mobility post-ABI; and if alignment after ABI becomes closer to healthy alignment over time.
Methods
Fourteen adults with ABI, evaluated over 6 months, and a reference sample of 30 healthy adults were studied. The primary measure for changes in mobility was the Clinical Outcome Variables Scale (COVS). Secondary measures were sit-to-stand, timed standing holding rails, independent walking speed and number of testing conditions achieved. The Functional Independence Measure (FIM) was scored at rehabilitation admission and discharge. To analyze postural alignment, participants were recorded in sitting and standing, each repeated holding rails, and walking if able. Three-dimensional kinematic data were used to quantify whole-body postural alignment, equal to mean segment displacements from the base of support in the transverse plane. Associations between three-dimensional kinematic alignment scores and COVS scores were calculated using Linear Mixed-Effects Models.
Results
Participants made significant improvements in COVS scores, most secondary mobility scores, and FIM scores over time (p ≤ .001). Relationships between increasing COVS scores and decreasing sitting and standing mal-alignment scores were statistically significant. Visual analysis of graphed segment positions indicated that sitting and standing alignment became more similar to healthy alignment over time; this was not clear for walking.
Conclusion
Improvement in postural alignment may be a factor for improving mobility in people with severe impairments after ABI.
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Acknowledgments
Thanks to the participants for their generous contributions throughout the project, and to the staff of the SA Brain Injury Rehabilitation Service for their support.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Supplementary material
Supplemental data for this article can be accessed on the publisher’s website.