Gait disorders Flashcards
Hemiplegic gait
- Unilateral weakness
- Arm flexed and internally rotated
- Leg drags
Common cause = stroke
Diplegic gait
Both sides involved
Spasticity in both legs
Narrow base gait, legs drag and toes scrape
Hip adductors are tight so scissor legs occurs
Neuropathic gait
High stepping gait
Seen unilaterally in patients with foot drop, DM
Seen bilaterally in patients with MND/ CMT/ DM
Toes point and high step - loss of dorsiflexion causing the toes to scrape the ground while walking
Myopathic gait
AKA Trendelenburg’s
Something wrong with muscles causing hip to drop
- Weakness in one side of hip girdle muscles leads to a drop in the contralateral side
- Superior gluteal nerve damage: this innervates gluteus medius and minimus
- Weakness on both sides causes bilateral drop and a waddling gait seen in muscular dystrophy
Choreiform/ hyperkinetic gait
Seen in basal ganglia disorders e.g. Huntington’s
- Irrregular, jerky movements in all extremities, muscles twitching all over the place
- Imagine ants in their clothes
Ataxic/ cerebellar gait
Most commonly seen in cerebellar disease
- Clumsy, staggering movements with a wide/ broad-based gait
- While standing patient will sway
- Unable to walk heel-to-toe in straight line
- Unable to maintain sitting posture
Imagine a drunk person
Parkinsonian gait
- Rigidity, bradykinesia
- Stooped, head and neck forward
- Flexion at knees
- ‘Mache a petit pas’ - walk of little steps
- Difficulty initiating steps
Sensory gait
Loss of proprioceptive input telling the person where their foot is so they slam their foot on the ground so they can sense it
AKA stomping gait
Caused by disorders that affect the dorsal columns e.g. B12 deficiency/ tabes dorsalis