Objective: To quantify gait abnormalities in people with Dravet syndrome (DS). Methods: Individuals with a confirmed diagnosis of DS were enrolled, and stratified according to knee flexion at initial contact (IC) and range of motion (ROM) during stance (atypical crouch: knee flexion >20° at IC and knee ROM >15° during stance; straight: knee flexion <20° at IC). A 1D ANOVA (α = 0.05) was used to test statistical differences among the joint kinematics and spatio–temporal parameters of the cohort and an age-matched control group. Clinical (neurological and orthopaedic evaluation) and anamnestic data (seizure type, drugs, genetic mutation) were collected; distribution between the two gait phenotypes was assessed with the Fisher exact test and, for mutation, with the chi-squared test (p < 0.05). Linear regression between maximum knee flexion and normalised walking speed was calculated. Results: Seventy-one subjects were enrolled and evaluated with instrumented gait analysis. Fifty-two were included in final analysis (mean age 13.8 ± 7.3; M 26). Two gait patterns were detected: an atypical crouch gait (34.6%) with increased ankle, knee and hip flexion during stance, and reduced walking speed and stride length not associated with muscle-tendon retractions; and a pattern resembling those of healthy age-matched controls, but still showing reduced walking speed and stride length. No differences in clinical or anamnestic data emerged between the two groups. Significance: Objectively quantified gait in DS shows two gait patterns with no clear-cut relation to clinical data. Kinematics abnormalities may be related to stabilization issues. These findings may guide rehabilitative and preventive measures.

Gait abnormalities in people with Dravet syndrome: A cross-sectional multi-center study / Di Marco R.; Hallemans A.; Bellon G.; Ragona F.; Piazza E.; Granata T.; Ceulemans B.; Schoonjans A.-S.; Van de Walle P.; Darra F.; Dalla Bernardina B.; Vecchi M.; Sawacha Z.; Scarpa B.; Masiero S.; Benedetti M.G.; Del Felice A.. - In: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PAEDIATRIC NEUROLOGY. - ISSN 1090-3798. - ELETTRONICO. - 23:6(2019), pp. 808-818. [10.1016/j.ejpn.2019.09.010]

Gait abnormalities in people with Dravet syndrome: A cross-sectional multi-center study

Benedetti M. G.;
2019

Abstract

Objective: To quantify gait abnormalities in people with Dravet syndrome (DS). Methods: Individuals with a confirmed diagnosis of DS were enrolled, and stratified according to knee flexion at initial contact (IC) and range of motion (ROM) during stance (atypical crouch: knee flexion >20° at IC and knee ROM >15° during stance; straight: knee flexion <20° at IC). A 1D ANOVA (α = 0.05) was used to test statistical differences among the joint kinematics and spatio–temporal parameters of the cohort and an age-matched control group. Clinical (neurological and orthopaedic evaluation) and anamnestic data (seizure type, drugs, genetic mutation) were collected; distribution between the two gait phenotypes was assessed with the Fisher exact test and, for mutation, with the chi-squared test (p < 0.05). Linear regression between maximum knee flexion and normalised walking speed was calculated. Results: Seventy-one subjects were enrolled and evaluated with instrumented gait analysis. Fifty-two were included in final analysis (mean age 13.8 ± 7.3; M 26). Two gait patterns were detected: an atypical crouch gait (34.6%) with increased ankle, knee and hip flexion during stance, and reduced walking speed and stride length not associated with muscle-tendon retractions; and a pattern resembling those of healthy age-matched controls, but still showing reduced walking speed and stride length. No differences in clinical or anamnestic data emerged between the two groups. Significance: Objectively quantified gait in DS shows two gait patterns with no clear-cut relation to clinical data. Kinematics abnormalities may be related to stabilization issues. These findings may guide rehabilitative and preventive measures.
2019
Gait abnormalities in people with Dravet syndrome: A cross-sectional multi-center study / Di Marco R.; Hallemans A.; Bellon G.; Ragona F.; Piazza E.; Granata T.; Ceulemans B.; Schoonjans A.-S.; Van de Walle P.; Darra F.; Dalla Bernardina B.; Vecchi M.; Sawacha Z.; Scarpa B.; Masiero S.; Benedetti M.G.; Del Felice A.. - In: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PAEDIATRIC NEUROLOGY. - ISSN 1090-3798. - ELETTRONICO. - 23:6(2019), pp. 808-818. [10.1016/j.ejpn.2019.09.010]
Di Marco R.; Hallemans A.; Bellon G.; Ragona F.; Piazza E.; Granata T.; Ceulemans B.; Schoonjans A.-S.; Van de Walle P.; Darra F.; Dalla Bernardina B.; Vecchi M.; Sawacha Z.; Scarpa B.; Masiero S.; Benedetti M.G.; Del Felice A.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/741934
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