The effects of stride length and stride frequency on trunk coordination in human walking
Received 6 August 2009; received in revised form 18 January 2010; accepted 24 January 2010. published online 22 February 2010.
Abstract
In speeding-up normal walking, relative phase between horizontal thorax and pelvis rotations changes from more in-phase (synchronous) to more out-of-phase. In pathology (stroke, Parkinson's disease, low-back pain, pregnancy-related pelvic girdle pain), this often fails to happen. Even in healthy gait, however, these phenomena remain poorly understood. Thorax–pelvis relative phase may increase with either stride length, or stride frequency. Sixteen healthy male subjects walked on a treadmill at 0.5m/s, 1.0m/s, or 1.5m/s, with small, normal, or large steps. Increasing stride length (with lower frequency) led to larger spinal rotations, larger thorax–pelvis relative phase, and lower pelvis–leg relative phase, while the thorax continued to counterrotate with respect to the leg. With small steps, speeding-up hardly affected thorax–pelvis relative phase, and spinal amplitudes remained low. From a certain walking speed onwards, pelvis rotations start to contribute to stride length, and thus to speed (the “pelvic step”). This phenomenon appears to be driven, and the present study suggests, at least for higher speeds, that also thoracic counterrotations are driven, and not determined by the passive dynamics of the system. For patients, several strategies may exist to avoid large thorax–pelvis relative phase, and the concomitant large rotations of the spine: walking slowly, walking with small steps, adapting the timing of thorax rotations to that of the pelvis, or refraining from adapting the timing of pelvis rotations to the movements of the leg.
aDepartment of Orthopaedics, Quanzhou First Hospital Affiliated to Fujian Medical University, Quanzhou, Fujian, PR China
bDepartment of Orthopaedics, First Affiliated Hospital of Fujian Medical University, Fuzhou, Fujian 35005, PR China
cResearch Institute MOVE, Faculty of Human Movement Sciences, VU University, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
dSecond Affiliated Hospital of Fujian Medical University, Quanzhou, Fujian, PR China
eOrthopaedic Biomechanics Laboratory, Fujian Medical University, Quanzhou, Fujian, PR China
fZhongshan Hospital, Xiamen University, Xiamen, Fujian, PR China
gPhysical Education Department, Fujian Medical University, Fuzhou, Fujian, PR China
Corresponding author at: Research Institute MOVE, Faculty of Human Movement Sciences, VU University, Van der Boechorststraat 9, 1081 BT Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Tel.: +31 20 598 8590; fax: +31 20 598 8529.
Corresponding author at: Department of Orthopaedics, First Affiliated Hospital of Fujian Medical University, Fuzhou, Fujian 35005, P.R. China. Tel.: +86 591 8798201; fax: +86 591 833 18716.