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Preliminary Trial to Increase Gait Velocity with High Speed Treadmill Training for Patients with Hemiplegia
25
Citations
11
References
2010
Year
Gait AnalysisPhysical ActivityMovement AnalysisExercise RehabilitationStroke RehabilitationKinesiologyPreliminary TrialGait VelocityExerciseMaximum Gait VelocityApplied PhysiologyNeurologyNeurorehabilitationHealth SciencesRehabilitationPhysical TherapyExercise PhysiologyPathological GaitHuman MovementMedicinePhase IiIncrease Gait Velocity
The purpose of this study was to determine whether high-speed treadmill training improved the gait velocity of patients whose maximum walking speed was assumed to have reached a plateau level. The subjects included seven patients with hemiplegia after stroke. The high-speed treadmill training was performed as the maximum gait velocity of each patient was presumed to have reached a plateau level. The patients walked 20% faster than their maximum gait velocity of the day for 5 days (phase I). Then they walked 20% slower than maximum gait velocity of the day for 5 days, and they repeated the fast treadmill walking for further 5 days (phase II). Before phase I, mean maximum gait velocity of the day was 0.84 m/sec before phase I, 1.08 m/sec after phase I, and 1.24 m/sec after phase II. These results demonstrated that training at a speed 20% faster than the maximum gait velocity of the day on the treadmill for 5 days could further increase a patient's gait velocity.
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