Publication date: Available online 20 August 2018
Source: Gait & Posture
Author(s): Ronald Verch, Anja Hirschmüller, Juliane Müller, Heiner Baur, Frank Mayer, Steffen Müller
Abstract
Background
In-toeing is a major concern of many parents presenting their children to pediatric orthopedists. Foot progression angle (FPA) quantifies the rotation of the foot’s longitudinal axis during gait, with negative values describing in-toeing and positive values describing out-toeing. Although it has been shown that the FPA changes over the course of a child’s development, reference values for the normal FPA-range are lacking.
Research question
This study aimed to establish reference values in 1-14 year old healthy children and to implement FPA-percentile curves for daily clinical use.
Methods
5910 healthy children performed at least 3 repetitions of barefoot walking over an instrumented walkway using a pressure measurement platform. The FPA [°] was extracted and analyzed by age and gender (mean ± standard deviation; median with percentiles, MANOVA (age, gender) and Wilcoxon-Signed-Rank test for intra-individual side differences (α = 0.05).
Results
FPA maximum was observed in 2-year-old children and diminished significant until the age of 4 to moderate out-toeing. For ages 5-14, no statistically significant differences in FPA values were present (p > 0.05). MANOVA confirmed age (p < 0.001) and gender (p < 0.001) as significant FPA influencing factors, without combined effect (p > 0.05). In every age group, right feet showed significantly greater out-toeing (p < 0.05).
Significance
Percentile values indicate a wide FPA range in children. FPA development in young children shows a spontaneous shift towards moderate external rotation (age 2-4), whereby in-toeing ≤ 1-5° can be present, but can return to normal. Bilateral in-toeing after the age of four and unilateral in-toeing after the age of seven should be monitored.
from #Audiology via ola Kala on Inoreader https://ift.tt/2wfo489
via IFTTT
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου