The effectiveness of walking stick use for neurogenic claudication: results from a randomized trial and the effects on walking tolerance and posture

Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2010 Jan;91(1):15-9. doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2009.08.149.

Abstract

Comer CM, Johnson MI, Marchant PR, Redmond AC, Bird HA, Conaghan PG. The effectiveness of walking stick use for neurogenic claudication: results from a randomized trial and the effects on walking tolerance and posture.

Objectives: To determine the immediate effects of using a stick on walking tolerance and on the potential explanatory variable of posture, and to provide a preliminary evaluation of the effects of daily walking stick use on symptoms and function for people with neurogenic claudication.

Design: A 2-phase study of neurogenic claudication patients comprising a randomized trial of 2 weeks of home use of a walking stick and a crossover study comparing walking tolerance and posture with and without a walking stick.

Setting: A primary care-based musculoskeletal service.

Participants: Patients aged 50 years or older with neurogenic claudication symptoms (N=46; 24 women, 22 men, mean age=71.26y) were recruited.

Intervention: Walking stick.

Main outcome measures: Phase 1 of the trial used the Zurich Claudication Questionnaire symptom severity and physical function scores to measure outcome. The total walking distance during a shuttle walking test and the mean lumbar spinal posture (measured by using electronic goniometry) were used as the primary outcome measurements in the second phase.

Results: Forty of the participants completed phase 1 of the trial, and 40 completed phase 2. No significant differences in symptom severity or physical function were shown in score improvements for walking stick users (stick user scores - control scores) in the 2-week trial (95% confidence interval [CI], -.24 to .28 and -.10 to .26, respectively). In the second phase of the trial, the ratio of the shuttle walking distance with a stick to without a stick showed no significance (95% CI, .959-1.096) between the groups. Furthermore, the use of a walking stick did not systematically promote spinal flexion; no significant difference was shown for mean lumbar spinal flexion for stick use versus no stick (95% CI, .351 degrees -.836 degrees ).

Conclusions: The prescription of a walking stick does not improve walking tolerance or systematically alter the postural mechanisms associated with symptoms in neurogenic claudication.

Publication types

  • Randomized Controlled Trial
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Canes*
  • Cross-Over Studies
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Intermittent Claudication / etiology
  • Intermittent Claudication / physiopathology
  • Intermittent Claudication / rehabilitation*
  • Lumbosacral Region
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Occupational Therapy / methods
  • Physical Endurance
  • Postural Balance*
  • Severity of Illness Index
  • Spinal Stenosis / complications
  • Spinal Stenosis / physiopathology
  • Spinal Stenosis / rehabilitation*
  • Walking*