Exercise Intensity during Treadmill Walking with Gait-Patterned FES among Patients with Incomplete Spinal Cord Injury: Case Series
Author(s) -
Masae Miyatani,
Kei Masani,
Noritaka Kawashima,
B. Catharine Craven,
T. Adam Thrasher,
Miloš R. Popović
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
isrn rehabilitation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-6137
pISSN - 2090-6129
DOI - 10.5402/2012/251750
Subject(s) - functional electrical stimulation , gait , spinal cord injury , physical medicine and rehabilitation , medicine , treadmill , intensity (physics) , physical therapy , gait analysis , spinal cord , stimulation , physics , quantum mechanics , psychiatry
Purpose. To determine the feasibility of increasing the cardiopulmonary exercise intensity during walking with gait-patterned functional electrical stimulation (GP-FES) among individuals with motor incomplete SCI. Methods. Two men with motor-incomplete SCI (Subjects A and B, age 45 and 50 years; Level of Injury: C4 and T10; AIS score: D and D, resp.) performed a three sequential four-minute continuous walking sessions [(1) regular gait (non-GP-FES-1); (2) gait with GP-FES (GP-FES); (3) regular gait (non-GP-FES-2)]. Oxygen consumption (Vo2) was measured continuously during trials. Results. Vo2 was higher during GP-FES (Subjects A and B; 14.5 and 19.1 mL/kg/min, resp.) as compared to regular gait (Non-GP-FES-1: Subjects A and B; 13.4 and 17.0: mL/kg/min, resp.; non-GP-FES-2: Subjects A and B; 13.1 and 17.5: mL/kg/min, resp.). Conclusion. The exercise intensity of GP-FES walking was higher than that of regular walking among individuals with motor incomplete SCI. Further investigations are required to determine the clinical relevance of the exercise.
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