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Spatiotemporal Gait Patterns During Overt and Covert Evaluation in Patients With Parkinson’s Disease and Healthy Subjects: Is There a Hawthorne Effect?

Parkinson’s disease (PD) and aging lead to gait impairments. Some of the disturbances of gait are focused on step length, cadence, and temporal variability of gait cycle. Under experimental conditions gait can be overtly evaluated, but patients with PD are prone to expectancy effects; thus it seems...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of applied biomechanics 2015-06, Vol.31 (3), p.189-194
Main Authors: Robles-García, Verónica, Corral-Bergantiños, Yoanna, Espinosa, Nelson, Jácome, María Amalia, García-Sancho, Carlos, Cudeiro, Javier, Arias, Pablo
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Parkinson’s disease (PD) and aging lead to gait impairments. Some of the disturbances of gait are focused on step length, cadence, and temporal variability of gait cycle. Under experimental conditions gait can be overtly evaluated, but patients with PD are prone to expectancy effects; thus it seems relevant to determine if such evaluation truly reflects the spontaneous gait pattern in such patients, and also in healthy subjects. Thirty subjects (15 subjects with PD and 15 healthy control subjects) were asked to walk using their natural, preferred gait pattern. In half of the trials subjects were made aware that they were being evaluated (overt evaluation), while in the rest of the trials the evaluation was performed covertly (covert evaluation). During covert evaluation the gait pattern was modified in all groups. Gait speed was significantly increased ( P = .022); step cadence and average step length were also significantly modified, the average step length increased ( P = .002) and the cadence was reduced ( P ≤ .001). Stride cycle time variability was unchanged significantly ( P = .084). These changes were not significantly different compared between elderly and young healthy controls either. Due to the small sample size, a note of caution is in order; however, the significant results suggest that covert evaluation of gait might be considered to complement experimental evaluations of gait.
ISSN:1065-8483
1543-2688
DOI:10.1123/jab.2013-0319