Σάββατο 1 Απριλίου 2017

Dual-task gait differences in female and male adolescents following sport-related concussion

Publication date: Available online 1 April 2017
Source:Gait & Posture
Author(s): David R. Howell, Andrea Stracciolini, Ellen Geminiani, William P. Meehan
Concussion may affect females and males differentially. Identification of gender-related differences after concussion, therefore, may help clinicians with individualized evaluations. We examined potential differences in dual-task gait between females and males after concussion. Thirty-five participants diagnosed with a concussion (49% female, mean age=15.0±2.1years, 7.5±3.0days post-injury) and 51 controls (51% female, mean age=14.4±2.1years) completed a symptom inventory and single/dual-task gait assessment. The primary outcome variable, the dual-task cost, was calculated as the percent change between single-task and dual-task conditions to account for individual differences in spatio-temporal gait variables. No significant differences in symptom severity measured by the post-concussion symptom scale were observed between females (32.0±18.0) and males (27.8±18.2). Compared with males, adolescent females walked with significantly decreased cadence dual-task costs after concussion (−19.7%±10.0% vs. −11.3%±9.2%, p=.007) when adjusted for age, height, and prior concussion history. No significant differences were found between female and male control groups on other dual-task cost gait measures. Females and males with concussion also walked with significantly shorter stride lengths than controls during single-task (females: 1.13±0.11m vs. 1.26±0.11m, p=.001; males: 1.14±0.14m vs. 1.22±0.15m, p=.04) and dual-task gait (females: 0.99±0.10m vs. 1.10±0.11m, p=.001; males: 1.00±0.13m vs. 1.08±0.14m, p=.04). Females demonstrated a significantly greater amount of cadence change between single-task and dual-task gait than males after a sport-related concussion. Thus, differential alterations may exist during gait among those with a concussion; gender may be one prominent factor affecting dual-task gait.



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