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Equilíbrio dinâmico em idosos com doença de Parkinson /Caetano, Maria Joana Duarte. January 2007 (has links)
Orientador: Lilian Teresa Bucken Gobbi / Banca: Florindo Stella / Banca: Renato de Moraes / Resumo: Andar é essencial para o desempenho das funções diárias. No entanto, as alterações morfofuncionais decorrentes do processo de envelhecimento podem comprometer o equilíbrio durante o andar e gerar instabilidade. Este comprometimento é ainda mais acentuado em idosos com doença de Parkinson devido aos distúrbios motores ocasionados pela doença. Neste contexto, os objetivos do presente estudo foram: 1) analisar as características espaço-temporais e os ângulos articulares de indivíduos idosos neurologicamente sadios e com doença de Parkinson idiopática andando livremente e em condições de restrição na largura e na altura da superfície de suporte; 2) relacionar estes parâmetros com as pontuações nas escalas de H&Y e UPDRS (apenas para os pacientes) e com a incidência de queda recente (1 ano) e pontuações na Escala de Equilíbrio Funcional de Berg (para ambos os grupos). Participaram 16 idosos distribuídos em dois grupos: oito idosos neurologicamente sadios e oito com doença de Parkinson idiopática. As características espaço-temporais e os ângulos articulares andando livremente e em condições de restrição na largura e na altura da superfície de suporte foram investigados por meio de ferramenta cinemática. Pacientes com doença de Parkinson apresentaram valores médios significativamente menores que os idosos neurologicamente sadios em relação à duração da fase de balanço e ao comprimento e velocidade da passada e maiores para a duração do duplo suporte devido à hipocinesia, à dificuldade no controle do equilíbrio e ao próprio relacionamento entre as variáveis. As restrições impostas pela superfície de suporte geraram alterações nas características espaço-temporais e angulares do andar dos idosos de ambos os grupos, devido à necessidade de adotar uma estratégia cautelosa que facilite o controle da locomoção, garantindo estabilidade, e ao medo de cair imposto pelas demandas da tarefa, ... / Abstract: Walking is crucial for the performance of daily living activities. However, morpho and functional changes due to the aging process can compromise the balance during walking and generate instability. It is more pronounced in elderly patients with Parkinson's disease due to the motor signs/symptoms of the disease. In this context, the aims of this study were: 1) to analyze the spatial and temporal parameters and joint angles of healthy elderly and with Parkinson's disease during free walking and under width and height constraints of the support surface; 2) to correlate these parameters with the scores in H&Y scale and UPDRS (only for patients) and with the occurrence of recent fall (1 year) and the scores in the Berg Functional Balance Scale (for both groups). Sixteen elderly were distributed in two groups: 8 healthy elderly and 8 idiopathic Parkinson's disease patients. Both the spatial and temporal parameters of gait and joint angles were investigated by means of kinematics tools during free walking and under width and height constraints of the support surface. Parkinson's disease patients showed significantly lower mean values than healthy elderly for swing phase duration, stride length and stride velocity, and higher double support duration due to the hipokinesia, the difficulty in balance control, and the relationship among the gait variables. The support surface constraints changed the gait spatial and temporal parameters and joint angles in both groups due to the necessity to perform a cautious walking strategy that can facilitate the locomotor control, preventing instability, and the fear of falling enforced by the task demands, specially when width and height constraints were associated. The scores in H&Y and UPDRS were not correlated to the gait parameters of the Parkinson's disease patients probably because the scales did not reflect the gait performance of patients under medication. There were a relationship among the gait . / Mestre
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Stability control during the double support phase of adaptive locomotion: Effect of age and environmental demandsChuyi Cui (13107099) 20 July 2022 (has links)
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<p>Falls mostly occur when people are walking. Investigations of control of gait stability have focused primarily on the single stance phase. My dissertation focused on the double support phase of gait because (1) responses to perturbations occur during the double support (2) the portion of the gait cycle spent in double support is increased with old age, and, more importantly, (3) since both feet can push off the ground simultaneously, there are more kinetic degrees of freedom (DoF) and therefore greater control authority over body motion during this phase. However, how these kinetic DoFs are coordinated during the double support phase is not fully understood. Thus, the goal of this dissertation was to identify the inter-leg coordination to stabilize whole-body motion and quantify how the inter-leg coordination is affected by intrinsic and extrinsic factors. Specifically, Study 1 focused on healthy aging (an intrinsic factor) and varying task demands (an extrinsic factor that changed while curb ascent versus curb descent). Study 2 investigated another extrinsic factor of future uncertain environmental demands (fixed versus uncertain foot targeting demand for the step after descending a curb). Using the uncontrolled manifold analysis, I identified ground reaction variable (GRV) synergies, i.e., synergistic covariations between the ground reaction forces and moments under the two feet that stabilize whole-body linear and angular motions. Furthermore, I found that GRV synergies were modulated by extrinsic factors: GRV synergies were sensitive to current fixed environmental demands (Study 1), whereas they were robust to future environmental demands on foot placement (Study 2). Lastly, I found that GRV synergies were not changed by the intrinsic factor of age, despite the physiological declines with aging (Study 1). The absence of an age effect on GRV synergies indicates that older adults have the preserved ability to exploit the control authority during the double support phase to maintain stability while negotiating a curb. The work extends the current body of literature on gait stability mechanisms and improves our understanding of changes in stability control as a function of different environmental demands.</p>
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Equilíbrio dinâmico em idosos com doença de ParkinsonCaetano, Maria Joana Duarte [UNESP] 13 December 2008 (has links) (PDF)
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caetano_mjd_me_rcla.pdf: 817407 bytes, checksum: f99f3e12cec3f7e3ecd3ea982d13c044 (MD5) / Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) / Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP) / Andar é essencial para o desempenho das funções diárias. No entanto, as alterações morfofuncionais decorrentes do processo de envelhecimento podem comprometer o equilíbrio durante o andar e gerar instabilidade. Este comprometimento é ainda mais acentuado em idosos com doença de Parkinson devido aos distúrbios motores ocasionados pela doença. Neste contexto, os objetivos do presente estudo foram: 1) analisar as características espaço-temporais e os ângulos articulares de indivíduos idosos neurologicamente sadios e com doença de Parkinson idiopática andando livremente e em condições de restrição na largura e na altura da superfície de suporte; 2) relacionar estes parâmetros com as pontuações nas escalas de H&Y e UPDRS (apenas para os pacientes) e com a incidência de queda recente (1 ano) e pontuações na Escala de Equilíbrio Funcional de Berg (para ambos os grupos). Participaram 16 idosos distribuídos em dois grupos: oito idosos neurologicamente sadios e oito com doença de Parkinson idiopática. As características espaço-temporais e os ângulos articulares andando livremente e em condições de restrição na largura e na altura da superfície de suporte foram investigados por meio de ferramenta cinemática. Pacientes com doença de Parkinson apresentaram valores médios significativamente menores que os idosos neurologicamente sadios em relação à duração da fase de balanço e ao comprimento e velocidade da passada e maiores para a duração do duplo suporte devido à hipocinesia, à dificuldade no controle do equilíbrio e ao próprio relacionamento entre as variáveis. As restrições impostas pela superfície de suporte geraram alterações nas características espaço-temporais e angulares do andar dos idosos de ambos os grupos, devido à necessidade de adotar uma estratégia cautelosa que facilite o controle da locomoção, garantindo estabilidade, e ao medo de cair imposto pelas demandas da tarefa,... / Walking is crucial for the performance of daily living activities. However, morpho and functional changes due to the aging process can compromise the balance during walking and generate instability. It is more pronounced in elderly patients with Parkinson’s disease due to the motor signs/symptoms of the disease. In this context, the aims of this study were: 1) to analyze the spatial and temporal parameters and joint angles of healthy elderly and with Parkinson’s disease during free walking and under width and height constraints of the support surface; 2) to correlate these parameters with the scores in H&Y scale and UPDRS (only for patients) and with the occurrence of recent fall (1 year) and the scores in the Berg Functional Balance Scale (for both groups). Sixteen elderly were distributed in two groups: 8 healthy elderly and 8 idiopathic Parkinson’s disease patients. Both the spatial and temporal parameters of gait and joint angles were investigated by means of kinematics tools during free walking and under width and height constraints of the support surface. Parkinson’s disease patients showed significantly lower mean values than healthy elderly for swing phase duration, stride length and stride velocity, and higher double support duration due to the hipokinesia, the difficulty in balance control, and the relationship among the gait variables. The support surface constraints changed the gait spatial and temporal parameters and joint angles in both groups due to the necessity to perform a cautious walking strategy that can facilitate the locomotor control, preventing instability, and the fear of falling enforced by the task demands, specially when width and height constraints were associated. The scores in H&Y and UPDRS were not correlated to the gait parameters of the Parkinson’s disease patients probably because the scales did not reflect the gait performance of patients under medication. There were a relationship among the gait .
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