Hamstrings and psoas lengths during normal and crouch gait: Implications for muscle-tendon surgery
β Scribed by Scott L. Delp; Allison S. Arnold; Rosemary A. Speers; Carolyn A. Moore
- Book ID
- 102913542
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 842 KB
- Volume
- 14
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0736-0266
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Crouch gait, one of the most common movement abnormalities among children with cerebral palsy, is characterized by persistent flexion of the knee during the stance phase. Short hamstrings are thought to be the cause of crouch gait; thus, crouch gait is often treated by surgical lengthening of the hamstrings. In this study, a graphicsβbased model of the lower extremity was used in conjunction with threeβdimensional kinematic data obtained from gait analysis to estimate the lengths of the hamstrings and psoas muscles during normal and crouch gaits. Only three of 14 subjects with crouch gait (four of 20 limbs with knee flexion of 20Β° or more through stance) had hamstrings that were shorter than normal by more than 1 SD during walking. Most (80%) of the subjects with crouch gait had hamstrings of normal length or longer, despite persistent knee flexion during stance. This occurred because the excessive knee flexion was typically accompanied by excessive hip flexion throughout the gait cycle. All of the subjects with crouch gait had a psoas that was shorter than normal by more than 1 SD during walking. These results emphasize the need to consider the geometry and kinematics of multiple joints before performing surgical procedures aimed at correcting crouch gait.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Recent studies of muscle lengths measured by means of gait analysis data and musculoskeletal models have suggested that in many cases of crouch gait in patients with cerebral palsy, the hamstrings are of normal length and the psoas muscles are short. In these studies, however, muscle le