People who have had a stroke often have difficulty walking and problems with their balance. The purpose of this project is to examine problems with foot postures in people who have weakness on one side of their body
The specific aims of this study are to: 1. Describe foot posture in individuals with hemiplegia following stroke using a quantitative navicular drop test. 2. Determine differences in people with normal, hypotonic, and hypertonic foot posture with regard to ankle range of motion, ankle strength, gait, and balance. This is an observational design study to describe relationships between the variables. Measurements will include both descriptive and quantitative measures. Thirty subjects with stroke will participate in one session of testing which will include: clinical assessment of foot posture using a descriptive classification system, quantitative measurement of navicular drop during standing, measurements of ankle range of motion, ankle strength, gait (lower extremity biomechanics and forceplate analysis), and static and dynamic balance. A chi-square test will be used to determine goodness of fit between classification with the descriptive system and the quantitative measurement. Independent one-way ANOVAs will be used to determine the mean differences in the foot posture groups for each of the dependent variables.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
17
University of Kansas Medical Center
Kansas City, Kansas, United States
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