Publication | Open Access
Quantitative analysis of rising from a chair in healthy and hemiparetic subjects.
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1994
Year
Upright PosturePhysical ActivityHealthy SubjectsHemiparetic PersonsMovement BiomechanicsUpper ExtremityHemiparetic PatientsMovement AnalysisKinesiologyStroke RehabilitationQuantitative AnalysisApplied PhysiologyNeurorehabilitationHealth SciencesPhysical MedicineMusculoskeletal FunctionRehabilitationHemiparetic SubjectsPhysical TherapyMusculoskeletal InteractionHuman MovementMedicine
In 15 healthy and 20 hemiparetic persons we studied standing-up by two force-plates. Phases before and after the seat-off, force distribution and centre of gravity displacement were assessed. The patients rose significantly slower. The force ratios after seat-off differed significantly between the groups (0.88 vs 0.68). Left/right hemiparetic patients put more weight on the affected limb in 18%/11% of the trials before seat-off, with its insufficient use after it mainly in the left patients. At seat-off, projection of the centre of gravity fell within the support area in hemiparetic patients, and 3 cm behind it in healthy subjects. With larger lateral displacement of the centre of gravity in the hemiparetic group, left hemiparetic patients mostly shifted their weight to the non-affected side and right hemiparetic patients to both sides. Weight distribution and mediolateral displacement of the centre of gravity in the left and right hemiparetic patients were considered.