Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How pressure-sensitive walkways measure gait in dogs
By Brønniche Møller Nielsen, Michelle et al.·Published in PloS one·2020·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Kinetic gait analysis in healthy dogs and dogs with osteoarthritis: An evaluation of precision and overlap performance of a pressure-sensitive walkway and the use of symmetry indices.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 21 dogs with osteoarthritis was evaluated to see how well a special pressure-sensitive walkway could measure their walking patterns compared to 41 healthy dogs. The goal was to find a reliable way to assess lameness in dogs with joint pain. While the system showed high precision in measuring ground forces, it struggled to clearly distinguish between healthy dogs and those with osteoarthritis. As a result, the researchers concluded that this method isn't ready for routine use in diagnosing osteoarthritis in dogs.
People also search for: dog limping diagnosis · osteoarthritis in dogs treatment · pressure-sensitive walkway for dogs
Abstract
In veterinary practice, a thorough gait examination is essential in the clinical workup of any orthopedic patient, including the large population of dogs with chronic pain as a result of osteoarthritis. The traditional visual gait examination is, however, a subjective discipline, and systems for kinetic gait analysis may potentially offer an objective alternative for gait assessment by the measurement of ground reaction forces. In order to avoid unnecessary testing of patients, a thorough, stepwise evaluation of the diagnostic performance of each system is recommended before clinical use for diagnostic purposes. The aim of the study was to evaluate the Tekscan pressure-sensitive walkway system by assessing precision (agreement between repetitive measurements in individual dogs) and overlap performance (the ability to distinguish dogs with lameness due to osteoarthritis from clinically healthy dogs). Direction of travel over the walkway was investigated as a possible bias. Symmetry indices are commonly used to assess lameness by comparing ground reaction forces across different combinations of limbs in each dog. However, SIs can be calculated in several different ways and specific recommendations for optimal use of individual indices are currently lacking. Therefore the present study also compared indices in order to recommend a specific index preferable for future studies of canine osteoarthritis. Forty-one clinically healthy dogs and 21 dogs with osteoarthritis were included in the study. High precision was demonstrated. The direction of travel over the walkway was excluded as a possible bias. A significant overlap was observed when comparing ground reaction forces measured in dogs with osteoarthritis compared to clinically healthy dogs. In some affected dogs, symmetry indices comparing contralateral limbs differed from clinically healthy dogs, but in general, the overlap performance was insufficient and, consequently, general use of this method for diagnostic purposes in dogs with osteoarthritis cannot be recommended.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33320889/