Tight and loose trunk motor control patterns during walking gait are moderately associated with higher kinesiophobia and higher interoceptive awareness, respectively in people with chronic low back pain
Author ORCID
Abstract
This study aimed to identify trunk motor control phenotypes, examine the association of gait kinematics with kinesiophobia and interoceptive awareness, and describe changes in gait performance and trunk kinematics following physiotherapy
Status
Graduate
Department
Physical Therapy
College
Graduate College
Campus
Athens
Faculty Mentor
Nicholas Karayannis
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Tight and loose trunk motor control patterns during walking gait are moderately associated with higher kinesiophobia and higher interoceptive awareness, respectively in people with chronic low back pain
This study aimed to identify trunk motor control phenotypes, examine the association of gait kinematics with kinesiophobia and interoceptive awareness, and describe changes in gait performance and trunk kinematics following physiotherapy