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Multi-Site Identification and Generalization of Clusters of Walking Behaviors in Individuals With Chronic Stroke and Neurotypical Controls

Natalia Sánchez, Nicolas Schweighofer, Sara J. Mulroy, Ryan T. Roemmich, Trisha M. Kesar, Gelsy Torres‐Oviedo, Beth E. Fisher, James M. Finley, Carolee J. Winstein

2023Neurorehabilitation and neural repair14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Walking patterns in stroke survivors are highly heterogeneous, which poses a challenge in systematizing treatment prescriptions for walking rehabilitation interventions. OBJECTIVES: We used bilateral spatiotemporal and force data during walking to create a multi-site research sample to: (1) identify clusters of walking behaviors in people post-stroke and neurotypical controls and (2) determine the generalizability of these walking clusters across different research sites. We hypothesized that participants post-stroke will have different walking impairments resulting in different clusters of walking behaviors, which are also different from control participants. METHODS: -means clustering, we identified walking clusters based on 17 spatiotemporal and force variables. We analyzed the biomechanical features within each cluster to characterize cluster-specific walking behaviors. We also assessed the generalizability of the clusters using a leave-one-out approach. RESULTS: We identified 4 stroke clusters: a fast and asymmetric cluster, a moderate speed and asymmetric cluster, a slow cluster with frontal plane force asymmetries, and a slow and symmetric cluster. We also identified a moderate speed and symmetric gait cluster composed of controls and participants post-stroke. The moderate speed and asymmetric stroke cluster did not generalize across sites. CONCLUSIONS: Although post-stroke walking patterns are heterogenous, these patterns can be systematically classified into distinct clusters based on spatiotemporal and force data. Future interventions could target the key features that characterize each cluster to increase the efficacy of interventions to improve mobility in people post-stroke.

Topics & Concepts

Generalizability theoryPsychological interventionPhysical medicine and rehabilitationStroke (engine)NeurotypicalRehabilitationCluster (spacecraft)GaitPsychologyCluster analysisPreferred walking speedMedicinePhysical therapyComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceDevelopmental psychologyAutism spectrum disorderMechanical engineeringAutismProgramming languageEngineeringPsychiatryBalance, Gait, and Falls PreventionStroke Rehabilitation and RecoveryMotor Control and Adaptation