Treadmill walking and running when combined with a supportive harness to provide body weight support (BWS) is being used in the retraining of the patient’s walk and run gait. As walking and running gait improves, BWS is decreased and the patient is required to control greater percentages of body weight. The effectiveness of BWS in physical therapy research with disabled patients indicated significant improvement in their ability to walk independently, improve their balance, and increased their gait velocity, step frequency, and stride length from the beginning of retraining to the end of training (Crompton et al., 2001; Field-Fote and Tepavac, 2002; Finch and Barbeau, 1985; Finch et al., 1991; Hesse et al., 1994; 1999; Lee and Farley, 1998; and Waagfjord et al., 1990). Finch et al. (1991) studied normal male subject’s walking gait under the influence of various BWS levels as compared to full weight support (FWS) gait using a treadmill. As the body weight was systematically removed and walking speed adjusted for BWS levels, the following changes in muscle activity, and mechanical changes in the walk were observed: 1) the amplitude in muscle activity decreased during the weight bearing phase and increased during the swing phase of the walk; 2) the center of gravity was progressively raised, which resulted in decreased hip and knee angular displacement with a decrease in single-limb support. According to Finch et al. (1991), all these observed changes were not significantly different and indicated that BWS could be advantageous in walking gait retraining in normal subjects. Most angular differences of the hip and knee were attributed to harness support and the inability of the subjects to fully plant their foot on the treadmill. McKay-Lyons et al. (2001) investigated BWS walking on cardio-respiratory changes in adults without impairment. Peak-expiratory gas exchange values changed little from a FWS to the BWS condition where 15% of the subject’s mass was supported by a harness during treadmill exercise testing. The researchers contended that cardio-respiratory exercise testing protocols used in association with BWS could safely be used in testing patients with neurological injuries. Body weight support systems have also been used in the study of locomotion in a microgravity environment. Reduced gravity research (Chang and Kram, 1999; Chang et al., 2000; 2001; Donelan and Kram, 2000; Farley and McMahon, 1992; He et al., 1991) have investigated the biomechanics, kinetic energy, and metabolic energy cost in walking or running on a reduced-gravity simulator and force treadmill by simply adding or reducing subject’s body weight using a harness apparatus. This area of research required the use of some gravity- reducing apparatus such as the reduced-gravity simulator and force-measuring treadmill. In particular, force-measuring treadmills were specifically designed to measure vertical and horizontal ground reaction forces across different walking speeds and BWS conditions. Such studies have indicated the following changes in the walk and run gait from FWS to BWS condition: 1) the horizontal forces change more than vertical forces (Chang and Kram, 1999; Chang et al., 2001), 2) the exchange of kinetic energy as it related to the center of mass was effected by different walking and running velocity and with proportional, systematically reduced BWS conditions (Chang and Kram, 1999; Chang et al., 2001), 3) the vertical and horizontal ground reaction forces decrease (Chang and Kram, 1999; Chang et al., 2000; 2001; Kram et al., 1997), 4) the stride length and frequency increased (Farley and McMahon, 1992; Kram et al., 1997), 5) energy consumption as measured by the rate of oxygen consumption decreases (Farley and McMahon, 1992), and 6) the foot contact time during the supportive phase of the walk or run decreases (Chang et al. , 2000). There have been few reports describing the kinematic measures of BWS with experienced healthy runners. Our rationale was to examine FWS and BWS using a kinematics perspective with healthy athletes running on a treadmill at a high constant speed. We adopted a similar BWS strategy used in physical therapy and in the study of microgravity environment where the runner’s mass was systematically reduced. We believed that the findings would provide meaningful interpretations about the similarities and differences between FWS and BWS treadmill running with experienced runners. Several difficulties were discovered in reviewing the literature about BWS effects on running. There was a lack of consistency in the protocol used to reduce the subject’s mass using a harness system. In addition, only He et al. (1991) examined BWS treadmill running using a speed greater than 2.5 m·s-1. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to compare FWS to BWS on kinematics characteristics of running throughout one running cycle at a high constant speed of 3. 8 m·s-1 or 7 mph. The kinematic changes from FWS to BWS in running on a treadmill that were of interest in this study are the angles of hip, knee, and ankle, foot contact time, vertical displacement of the center of mass, stride length and stride frequency. These kinematic measures are common in the analysis of the running gait and are related to research of basic running mechanics. We used the FWS condition to determine if the kinematic measures in BWS running would change when their body mass was reduced 20% and 40%. It was hypothesized that BWS treadmill running produced significant changes in the kinematic measures compared to FWS treadmill running. Physical therapy and simulated microgravity research suggest that BWS running will cause a smaller vertical displacement of the center of mass, as compared to FWS running, associated with decreased contact time, decreased stride frequency, decreased hip, knee, and ankle angle ranges. |