Relationship between 3D lower limb bone morphology and 3D gait variables in children with uni and bilateral Cerebral Palsy.

Gait Posture

Fondation Ildys, Brest, France; LATIM, Inserm U1101, Brest, France; Université de Bretagne Occidentale, Brest, France; Service de Médecine Physique et de Réadaptation, CHRU Brest, France.

Published: February 2022


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Article Abstract

Background: Medical and surgical interventions to prevent or reduce bone deformities and improve gait in children with cerebral palsy (CP) are based on empirical evidence that there is a relationship between bone deformities and gait deviations.

Research Question: What is the relationship between tibial-femoral bone morphology and kinematic gait variables in ambulant children with CP?

Methods: A retrospective analysis was conducted on data from 121 children with uni- (n = 64, mean age 9.9 (SD 3.4) years) and bi- lateral (n = 57, mean age 10.4 (SD 3.6) years) CP who had undergone 3D gait analysis and biplanar X-rays (EOS® system). The limbs were split as DIP (the more impaired limb of children with bilateral CP), HEMI (the impaired limb of unilateral CP) and REF (the unimpaired limb of unilateral CP). Multi-variable Linear Regressions were performed between 23 kinematic variables, the Gait Deviation Index (GDI) and a model composed of nine 3D bone variables for each limb type.

Results: When the whole sample was pooled, 72% of R values were poor, 16% were fair, and 12% were moderate. Lower limb bone morphology models explained less than 1% of GDI variability. Correlations between tibial-femoral rotational parameters and hip rotation were mostly poor. Mean foot progression angle was the only kinematic parameter that was fairly to moderately correlated with bone variables in the 3 limb types. A tibial-femoral bone model explained 48% of the variability of mean foot progression angle in the REF limbs, 31% in the HEMI limbs and 25% in the DIP limbs.

Significance: Tibial-femoral bone morphology was only weakly related to kinematic gait variables, in contrast with common clinical assumptions. These results suggest that factors other than bone morphology influence gait quality and thus a thorough clinical examination and gait analysis is required prior to making treatment decisions.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gaitpost.2021.11.011DOI Listing

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