Publication date: Available online 21 February 2019
Source: Gait & Posture
Author(s): Lena Carcreff, Joel Fluss, Gilles Allali, Nathalie Valenza, Kamiar Aminian, Christopher J. Newman, Stéphane Armand
Abstract
Aim
To assess the gait and cognitive performances of children with cerebral palsy (CP) during dual tasks (DT) in comparison to typically developing (TD) children.
Method
This prospective, observational, case-control study included 18 children with CP (7 girls, 11 boys; median age 12 [10:13] years and 19 controls (9 girls, 10 boys; median age 12 [10:13y6mo] years). Performances were recorded during a simple walking task, 5 DT (walking + cognitive tasks with increasing cognitive load), and 5 simple cognitive tasks (while sitting). Gait parameters were computed using an optoelectronic system during walking tasks. Six parameters were selected for analysis by a principal component analysis. Cognitive performance was measured for each cognitive task. The dual-task cost (DTC) was calculated for each DT.
Results
Gait performance decreased in both groups as DT cognitive load increased (e.g., walking speed normalized by leg length, in simple task: 1.25 [1.15:1.46] s-1 for CP, 1.53 [1.38:1.62] s-1 for TD; DT with highest load: 0.64 [0.53:0.80] s-1 for CP, 0.95 [0.75:1.08] s-1 for TD). The CP group performed significantly worse than TD group in every task (including the simple task), but DTC were similar in both groups. A task effect was found for the majority of the gait parameters.
Interpretation
The reduced gait performance induced by DT may generate underestimated difficulties for children with CP in daily-life situations, where DT are common. This should be considered in clinical assessments.
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