Interlimb coordination and spatiotemporal variability during walking and running in children with developmental coordination disorder and typically developing children

Mieke Goetschalckx*, Lousin Moumdjian, Peter Feys, Eugene Rameckers

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background: A different interlimb coordination and higher variability in movement patterns is evident in children with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD). The impact of DCD on interlimb coordination during walking and running is unknown. Aim: To assess interlimb coordination and spatiotemporal variability during overground walking and running in children with and without DCD. Methods: Children with DCD and typically developing children (TDC), from 8 to 12 years participated. Children were equipped with portable sensors. Participants walked and ran for 3 min in an oval-path at their comfortable pace. Interlimb coordination, expressed by the phase coordination index (PCI), and spatiotemporal variability (coefficient of variance (CoV)) were collected. Results: Twenty-one children with DCD and 23 TDC participated. During walking, PCI showed similar values in both groups, but a higher spatiotemporal variability was observed in children with DCD. During running, PCI was higher (reduced coordination) in children with DCD than TDC and a higher spatiotemporal variability was shown. Conclusions and implications: Only during running, interlimb coordination of children with DCD was lower than TDC. During both walking and running tasks, spatiotemporal variability was higher in DCD. Current results implicate that difficulties in children with DCD is more prominent when motor coordination is more challenged. What this paper adds: This paper adds to the literature on coordination and gait pattern in children with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD) through a cross-sectional analysis of interlimb coordination and variability of spatiotemporal measures of overground walking and running. Overground walking and running were performed in a large oval-path allowing the assessment of coordination and gait patterns in an ecological valid set-up. Our results indicate that during a more demanding task, namely running, children with DCD display a less coordinated running pattern, expressed by a significantly higher phase coordination index, than typically developing peers. During walking, the interlimb coordination was similar between both groups. The current result is in accordance with the hybrid model of DCD that states that motor coordination difficulties in DCD are dpendent on the interaction of the task, individual and environment. This
Original languageEnglish
Article number103252
Number of pages15
JournalHuman Movement Science
Volume96
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2024

Keywords

  • Interlimb coordination
  • Phase coordination index
  • Developmental coordination disorder
  • Walking
  • Running
  • BILATERAL COORDINATION
  • RHYTHMIC COORDINATION
  • LIMB COORDINATION
  • GAIT PARAMETERS
  • MOTOR
  • STABILITY
  • DCD
  • PATTERNS
  • SYSTEMS
  • PERFORMANCE

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