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Altered balance control in thoracic adolescent idiopathic scoliosis during obstructed gait

Kuan‐Wen Wu, Tung‐Wu Lu, Wei‐Chun Lee, Ya-Ting Ho, Ting-Chun Huang, Jyh‐Horng Wang, Ting‐Ming Wang

2020PLoS ONE18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) is the most common spinal deformity during adolescence, leading to altered postural control with compromised stability. To identify the effects of AIS on whole-body balance control during obstacle-crossing, 14 adolescents with Lenke 1 thoracic AIS and 14 healthy controls were compared in terms of the inclination angle (IA) of the body's center of mass (COM) relative to the center of pressure (COP), the rate of change of IA (RCIA) and the jerk index of IA. Between-side comparisons were also performed for the AIS group. The patients showed less smooth COM-COP motion in the sagittal plane with significantly increased anterior RCIA and IA jerk index during crossing with either the concave side (p = 0.001) or the convex side (p = 0.001) leading when compared to healthy controls. In the frontal plane, the patients showed close-to-zero RCIA (p = 0.002) while crossing with the leading limb, with an increased IA magnitude (p = 0.039) only while crossing with the concave-side limb leading. The patients with Lenke 1 thoracic AIS were found to cross obstacles with altered, compromised COM-COP control in both sagittal and frontal planes when compared to healthy controls. The results suggest that the thoracic spinal deformity in Lenke 1 AIS affects the whole-body balance control during obstacle-crossing, which should be monitored for signs of increased risk of loss of balance in the management of such patient groups.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCoronal planeCenter of pressure (fluid mechanics)Sagittal planeBalance (ability)Idiopathic scoliosisDeformityScoliosisPhysical medicine and rehabilitationSurgeryAnatomyPhysicsThermodynamicsAerodynamicsScoliosis diagnosis and treatmentSpinal Fractures and Fixation TechniquesBalance, Gait, and Falls Prevention
Altered balance control in thoracic adolescent idiopathic scoliosis during obstructed gait | Litcius