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Trauma

DOES THE ANKLE-FOOT ORTHOSIS IMPROVE VERTICAL FORCES DURING GAIT IN CHILDREN WITH SPASTIC DIPLEGIC CEREBRAL PALSY? A RETROSPECTIVE 3-D GAIT ANALYSIS OF 19 CHILDREN

Scottish Committee for Orthopaedics and Trauma (SCOT) meeting, January 2016



Abstract

Introduction

There is limited evidence assessing the effect of the Ankle Foot Orthosis (AFO) on gait improvements in diplegic cerebral palsy. In particular, the effect of the AFO on vertical forces during gait has not been reported. Appropriate vertical ground reaction forces are crucial in enabling children with CP to walk efficiently. This study investigated the effect of AFO application on the vertical forces in gait, particularly the second vertical peak in force (FZ2) in late stance. The force data was compared with the barefoot walk.

Patients and Methods

A retrospective analysis of nineteen children (8M,11F) who met inclusion criteria of a diagnosis of spastic diplegic CP, ability to walk independently barefoot and also using bilateral rigid AFOs were included. Gait data were acquired using the Vicon-Nexus ® motion-capture. Resulting ground reaction force data were recorded. Appropriate statistical methods assessed significance between barefoot and AFO data

Results

68.4% of subjects experienced increase in FZ2 magnitude in left leg and 63.2% experienced objective increase in right leg after AFO application. Mean increased in FZ2 was 5.33N in left leg and 8.53 N in right leg. Results indicate significant improvement in amplitude of FZ2 generation with AFO application, significantly increased gait efficiency, and a significantly normalized pattern of vertical force produced during gait.

Discussion

The AFO is effective in enabling children with diplegic CP to achieve efficient gait patterns. Our study is the first to our knowledge that focuses on the effect of AFO on specifically vertical ground reaction force produced in gait.