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The purpose of this study is to investigate the cerebral activation in healthy subjects in 4 conditions of gait :
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Gait and balance impairments caused by neurological disorders affect many people around the world and impact on independent living and quality of life. Gait rehabilitation is therefore highly important for individuals with neurological diseases. In recent years, rehabilitation strategies were carried out considering new technological devices and paradigms have been developed to increase the effectiveness of rehabilitation. Brain and clinical research have provided a new understanding of the capabilities of music to engage and shape motor functions to support brain recovery processes. Humans possess an ability to perceive and synchronize movements to the beating music. In context of motor rehabilitation, musical rhythm entrains movement in patients with neurological impairment, opening new frontiers for using rhythm and music to prime the motor system and favour improvement of deficiency consequences. Rhythmic auditory stimulation (RAS) is a gait rehabilitation method in which patients synchronize foot steps to a metronome or musical beats. Typically, rhythmic cues are matched to the individual's preferred cadence and, once the movement is entrained to the external cues, the rhythm is gradually increased by 5-10% over baseline. However, little is known about the neural correlates of gait during RAS.
fNIRS (functional Near Infra Red Spectroscopy) is a functional method that allows to study the cerebral cortex changes during different tasks (like fMRI). This technique therefore makes it possible to study brain activation under more ecological conditions than fMRI and are therefore particularly suitable for exploring rehabilitation techniques.
This research aims to study and compare in healthy subjects, using, the brain regions involved in 4 conditions of gait without and with rhythmic auditory stimulations.
The protocol has 4 conditions :
The fNIRS will used the Brite MKII apparatus. Gait parameters were recorded by FeetMe(R) Monitor (insole version FTM-DK, Atmel firmware version 2.3.10, Nordic firmware version 6.3.15).
Four gait parameters, including speed, cadence, stride length and double support time were analyzed. Gait speed is defined as the walking distance in a second (in cm/s), cadence as the number of steps within a minute walk (in steps/min). Stride length indicates the distance (in cm) from initial contact of one foot to subsequent contact of same foot. Double support time occurs when both feet are in contact with the ground simultaneously, it is normalized to stride time and expressed in % Gait Cycle (%). These 4 parameters are the most commonly used when studying the effect of SAR on gait.
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29 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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