Effects of Fast Functional Electrical Stimulation Gait Training on Mechanical Recovery in Poststroke Gait

2011 
Stroke leads to gait impairments that can negatively influence quality of life. Functional electrical stimulation (FES) applied during fast walking is an effective gait rehabilitation strategy that can lead to improvements in gait performance, walking speed and endurance, balance, activity, and participation post-stroke. The effect of FastFES gait training on mechanical energy utilization is not well understood. The objective of this study was to test the effects of 12-weeks of FastFES gait training on mechanical recovery indices of post-stroke gait. Kinematic data were collected from 11 stroke survivors before and after 12-weeks of FastFES training. Mechanical recovery was calculated from the positive changes in vertical, anterior-posterior, and medial-lateral components of COM energy. The average mechanical recovery increased from 34.5% before training to 40.0% after training. The increase was statistically significant (p=.014). The average self-selected walking speed increased from 0.4m/s to 0.7m/s after the 12-week FastFES training. The results indicate that the subjects were better able to generate and utilize the external mechanical energy of walking after FastFES gait training. FastFES gait training has the capacity to increase the gait speed, improve the mechanical recovery, and reduce the mechanical energy expenditure of stroke survivors when they walk.
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