Walking
Establish yourself as the premier movement expert in your community and among your referrers. Our Walking module enhances your healthcare practice and simplifies your everyday tasks.
Benefits
With our Walking Module, you can effectively assess and monitor the progression of your patients' movement quality, regardless of the cause - be it neurological, orthopedic, age-related, or post-surgical. Experience the power of advanced technology in managing diverse motion disorders and delivering optimal care.
Customized Care & Enhanced Outcomes: Harness the power of data-driven gait analysis to develop personalized treatment plans that cater to each patient's unique needs, improving results and satisfaction.
Objective Measures for Performance Outcome: Assess walking as a crucial activity impacted by neurological, orthopedic, and cardiorespiratory conditions, as well as back, knee, hip, and foot pain.
Sensitive Measures for Early Detection: Utilize advanced methods to detect abnormalities at an early stage, enabling timely intervention and better patient care.
Value
Streamlined Workflow
Enhance your clinical assessments with the user-friendly Walking Analysis module from Digitsole Pro, allowing for seamless integration into your existing practice. Save valuable time and effort as you analyze patients' movement through gait analysis in both clinic and real-life conditions in less than 3 minutes.
Improve Patient Satisfaction
With our simple interface, all practitioners can read and easily understand all the parameters of patients' movements.
Foster Treatment Completion
Analyze and track progress using clear, easy-to-understand visuals and data interpretation, actively involving patients in their rehab journey and motivating them to fully commit to their treatment plan.
Parameters
Average speed of the patient.
Number of steps taken per minute.
Length between two successive stances of the heel of the same foot.
Time during which the foot is in contact with the ground, standardized to be expressed as apercentage of the cycle time.
Time during which the foot is not in contact with the ground, standardized to be expressed asa percentage of the cycle time.
Percentage of the cycle during which both feet are in contact with the ground at the same time.
First sub-component of the stance phase. Loading phase begins when the heel touches the ground and cushion the impact. It ends when toes touch the ground at the flat foot in event.
Second sub-component of the stance phase. The flat foot phase begins at the flat foot in event and ends when the heel takes off at flat foot off event.
Third sub-component of the stance phase. The propulsion is the time between the flat foot off event and toe off.
Minimum height between the toes and the ground during oscillation of the foot.
Defined between the foot and the ground to express the inclination in the transverse plane of the foot at the four key moments in the unfolding of the step: heel, toe, heel and toe take-off.
Defined between the ground and the foot at the time of heel placement.
Maximal distance between the foot and the ground during the swing phase.
Maximum distance of lateral foot movement during oscillation.
Defines between the orientation of the foot and the patient's path of travel.
Expressesthe congruence between the values obtained for the left and right foot.Symmetry makes it possible to determine whether one leg is used more than theother when walking.
Ratio of the propulsion speed by the average stride speed.
Based on the analysis of pronation/supination angles, it represents the trajectory of the center of support during the contact phase at the foot.
Evolution of the parameters during the different acquisitions.
Get access now to 5 use cases of walking & running analysis
USE CASES
Analyze objectively the mobility of your patients with various motion disorders whether neurological, orthopedic, sports-related or age-related.
The patient is a 25-year-old woman who work in dentistry and stands most of the day. She suffers from hallux valgus that bothers her when she walks but is also an aesthetic concern.
The patient is a 12-year-old young man who plays tennis 5 times per week in training and competition. His parents made an appointment because he complained for weeks of pain in the front of his left knee.
A walk analysis of an older adult in a nursing home who has trouble walking and has already fallen. The aim of this consultation is to optimize the rehabilitation program to better maintain autonomy.