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A hierarchical cluster analysis to determine whether injured runners exhibit similar kinematic gait patterns

Susanne Jauhiainen, Andrew J. Pohl, Sami Äyrämö, Jukka‐Pekka Kauppi, Reed Ferber

2020Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports64 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Previous studies have suggested that runners can be subgrouped based on homogeneous gait patterns; however, no previous study has assessed the presence of such subgroups in a population of individuals across a wide variety of injuries. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to assess whether distinct subgroups with homogeneous running patterns can be identified among a large group of injured and healthy runners and whether identified subgroups are associated with specific injury location. Three-dimensional kinematic data from 291 injured and healthy runners, representing both sexes and a wide range of ages (10-66 years), were clustered using hierarchical cluster analysis. Cluster analysis revealed five distinct subgroups from the data. Kinematic differences between the subgroups were compared using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). Against our hypothesis, runners with the same injury types did not cluster together, but the distribution of different injuries within subgroups was similar across the entire sample. These results suggest that homogeneous gait patterns exist independent of injury location and that it is important to consider these underlying patterns when planning injury prevention or rehabilitation strategies.

Topics & Concepts

HomogeneousGaitCluster (spacecraft)Physical medicine and rehabilitationHierarchical clusteringKinematicsPopulationAnalysis of varianceRehabilitationMedicineGait analysisPhysical therapyCluster analysisStatisticsInternal medicineMathematicsComputer scienceEnvironmental healthCombinatoricsClassical mechanicsPhysicsProgramming languageLower Extremity Biomechanics and PathologiesInjury Epidemiology and PreventionTraffic and Road Safety
A hierarchical cluster analysis to determine whether injured runners exhibit similar kinematic gait patterns | Litcius