When one leg was immobilised, healthy individuals walked with a greater oxygen cost through a similar range of treadmill velocities and the normal U-shaped energy cost (ml·kg-1·min-1) to velocity relationship changed from a cubic to an inverse fit with no minimum (optimum) point for oxygen cost (Figure 1). During free treadmill walking, individuals walked at a self-selected walking velocity of approximately 1.30 m·s-1. The free SSWS velocity and the associated mean (optimum) oxygen cost (0.16 ± 0.02 ml·kg-1·min-1) compared favourably with an earlier treadmill study (Pearce et al., 1983) but was lower than that reported by Waters et al., 1988 during over ground (terrain) walking. During free treadmill walking individuals self- selected slower velocities (Fr = 0.18; corresponding to 0.16 ml·kg-1·min-1) compared with that suggested as being most ‘efficient’ (i.e. a velocity associated with the lowest energy cost) during over-ground walking by Alexander’s dynamic similarity model where Fr = 0.25 (Minetti and Alexander, 1997). Thus results from the present study suggests that the dynamic similarity model developed for over-ground walking may not apply to the altered mechanics of treadmill walking, a point also identified by Dingwell et al. (2001). In fact the lowest oxygen cost during free walking was 0.15 ml·kg-1·min-1 (Fr = 0.26). During immobilised walking the lowest oxygen cost was 0.19 ml·kg-1·min-1 (Fr = 0.25); and the corresponding measures at immobilised SSWS were 0.21 ml·kg-1·min-1 (Fr = 0.12) (Table 2). As expected, when individuals were immobilised they walked at slower velocities (Hanada and Kerrigan, 2001; Mattsson and Brostrom, 1990). A decrease in walking velocity was not surprising as individuals could not achieve an optimal gait when wearing the brace and were observed to compensate by either circumduction or hip hiking to advance the immobilised leg. Waters and Mulroy, 1999 and Mattsson and Brostrom, 1990 reported that walking with an immobilized knee caused an increase in oxygen cost of approximately 23%, similar to that calculated in the present study. Not only did walking with a hip and knee immobilized lead to a higher oxygen cost (ml·kg-1·min-1), but also that the normal energy (oxygen) cost to Fr (velocity) relationship changed from a cubic to an inverse relationship. To the best of the authors’ knowledge no previous study has examined the oxygen cost to velocity relationship within a normal population through such a wide range of velocities during limb immobilisation. It was hypothesised that the higher oxygen cost observed at all velocities may be in part due to: the weight of the brace adding to the effort of raising the centre of mass (CoM), and greater vertical displacement of CoM due to the limited stance phase and knee flexion (during both ‘stance’ and ‘swing’), the additional effort required to control the torso and the energy required to initiate and stop limb movement when optimal swing mechanics were prevented. The change from the normal U-shaped curve suggests that hip and knee immobilisation disrupted the normal pendulum mechanism. It is interesting that during limb immobilisation a minimum oxygen cost was not observed, rather the oxygen cost gradually reduced as walking velocity increased (Figure 1b). These findings support the current trend with neurological patients during rehabilitation which concentrates on increasing walking velocity (Pohl et al., 2002, Sullivan et al., 2002). The results of the present study also suggest that when one limb is immobilised the mechanics of walking are altered, such that subjects were unable to walk optimally (i.e. with a minimum energy / oxygen cost). Taking into consideration the positive effect of stretching at the hip on movement economy in hemiplegic gait (Mattsson et al., 1990) the results of the present study lend support for further investigation into stretching protocols and interventions that increase hip and knee mobility in individuals with a stiff-limbed gait, and for encouraging faster walking velocities during the rehabilitation process. The findings from the present study must be considered in light of the knowledge that the inverse curve fit to the data in the immobilised condition may in part be due to the reduced range of walking velocities during lower limb immobilisation. The present study was carried out in healthy men and women, and future studies should attempt to investigate pathological gait using the energy cost to Fr relationship before any conclusions for rehabilitation should be drawn. |