Through the aim to measure walking-related fatigue effects on gait kinematics, we comparatively examined nine patients with MS and twenty-six healthy subjects when performing a 6-min walking test. The evolution of the ROM, CoV, and SI during the execution of the test was taken into account and reliability and repeatability analyses of the proposed synthetic indices were performed both intra- and inter-day.
4.1. Are the Proposed Synthetic Indices Reliable and Repeatable?
Results related to the reliability permit to assume that the here proposed indices express an excellent reliability, considering the walking distance WL and the Δ
max for all the examined joints. Conversely, results recommend particular attention to the variability of the indices when handling data from some specific time subgroups of the task even though a good reliability was found. The reliability results are similar to the ones related to gait analysis performed by optoelectronic systems [
29]. The good and excellent reliability found for the intra-day analysis allows assessing that the selected indices are not influenced by the intra-subject variability of the gait. Furthermore, the reported inter-day reliability permits to consider negligible the effects of both the sensors re-placement on body segments and the intra-subject variability of gait performed in different days. These negligible effects can be ascribed to the application of the functional calibration that was properly designed to avoid bias on the results of gait analysis performed by IMU due to a different alignment of the sensors on the body segments [
32].
By moving the repeatability analysis, all the found maximum values of SD are comparable with the intrinsic accuracy related to the used inertial sensors, i.e., lower than 1° [
30] (see
Figure 2), for both intra-day and inter-day analysis. These results allowed affirming that the three variability sources, which are intra-subject gait variability, the sensor re-placement, and the inter-day gait changes, do not influence the repeatability of the novel proposed indices. In fact, the obtained results can be likely associated to the sensor accuracy rather than to the three sources of variability above reported. By comparing the results for the intra- and inter-day repeatability related to indices based on mROM and SI, we can affirm that the values associated with the inter-day repeatability are always comparable with the sensors accuracy even though greater values were found with respect to the intra-day analysis. This result allows us to state that a single test in a single day should be suitable for the gait analysis evaluation. This finding is in line with the one reported in other studies focused on gait analysis [
39,
41].
In addition, the greater reliability and repeatability of Δ
max than the decrement δ can be due to the different mathematical definition of these indices; in fact, Δ
max considers only the maximum difference during the overall task, whereas δ considers the specific time subgroup sequence that can change among the subjects. The high value of reliability related to the WL, close to the perfection, i.e., ICC equal to 1, and the high repeatability, suggested by the low value of SD, permits affirming that healthy subjects choose always the same velocity capable to avoid fatigue when the time duration of the walking test is the same, confirming the excellent reliability and repeatability of the traditional outcome of the 6MWT [
34].
As a conclusion, the here proposed parameters can be considered robust with respect to the typical intra-subject gait variability and any potential differences occurred when comparing healthy subjects with patients affected by MS can be ascribed to the pathology effects. It is worth highlighting that the reliability and repeatability of synthetic indices are fundamental requirements to introduce them into the clinical practice, even though this metrological aspect is often neglected in biomechanical studies.
4.2. Does Prolonged Walling Lead to Changes in Gait Kinematics?
Patients affected with MS showed different gait kinematics with respect to healthy subjects in terms of a general reduction of the ROM, a greater value of gait variability and gait asymmetry already from the first minute of the walking. These findings confirmed that gait of MS patients differs from the control group also in short walking [
42]. These findings may be the consequence of a motor control deficit, as reported in [
43]. By concerning the gait variability, patients with MS showed more than twice as much variability in gait performance also during prolonged walking, confirming the results reported in [
44] regarding the gait variability during one minute of walking. Several studies have demonstrated that the gait variability is strictly related to the gait velocity in patients affected by neurological disease; in particular, greater variability at hip, knee, and ankle level was observed in correspondence with a decrease of walking speed [
45,
46]. Thus, the here found differences in variability may be attributed to the smaller value of speed typical of subjects with MS to complete the motor task. Focusing on the gait asymmetry, we can assess that the degenerative changes caused by the pathology take place not equally on lower limb sides, in accordance with [
47]. This finding suggests that walking of subjects with MS is characterized by a diminishing inter-limb coordination, reflecting also in a greater variability of movement patterns [
13]. In addition, the overall inter-subject variability observed for the MS group in all parameters can be justified by considering that the enrolled group is heterogeneous since the EDSS score ranged from 1.5 to 4; in fact, it is already demonstrated that the changes in gait kinematics increase according to the level of disability [
48]. Generally, patients with MS are also characterized by a reduced walking speed, as also demonstrated by [
49].
Moving on the prolonged walking effects, the lower value of walking distance covered during the execution of the test performed by MS patients can be attributed to the fatigability effects that lead to a decrease of walking speed, shorter steps, and longer step times, as revealed by [
49]. As also reported by [
13], the reduced stride length may be considered as the result of a reduction of isometric quadricep strength and the consequent impossibility to produce adequate muscle moments of lower limb joints. In addition, our results confirm that the fatigue in MS patients occurs as changes in gait kinematics [
25], and that the fatigue could amplifies the difference among MS patients and the control group [
13] during gait.
By considering the outcomes related to δ and Δ
max, we can affirm that the values obtained for CG are comparable with the intrinsic accuracy of the sensors [
30]; for this reason, the increment/decrement occurred during the execution of the 6MWT could be due to the metrological characteristics of the adopted sensors rather than to the effects related to prolonged walking. Conversely, the decrements of the mROM and the increments of CoV and SI observed for all the patients in the MS group are greater than the sensor accuracy (see
Table 7). Thus, we can likely affirm that monitoring the evolution of the here proposed indices can be an appropriate methodology for assessing the gait deterioration caused by prolonged walking.
Specifically, by focusing on the outcomes of the δ related to the ROM, the difference between CG and the most variable lower limb side of MS can be observed from the second minute only for the ankle joint, from the third minute for the knee, and only in the two last minutes for the hip. The presence of a significant decrement starting as early as first minutes at the ankle and knee level can derived to tibialis anterior, which is one of the muscles more susceptible to fatigue induced by locomotion [
42] and it is one of the agonist muscles involved in the movement of knee and ankle during walking [
29]. Conversely, the effects on hip joint elicited only during the last minute can be related to the capability of quadriceps to generate isometric strength longer than other lower limb muscles [
50]. By combining the findings achieved in the comparison MS-CG and the ones obtained for the timing effects, we can assess that knee and ankle range of motion is early affected by the prolonged walking with respect to CG and a further deterioration occurred at the end of the task; conversely, the hip range of motion is characterized by a constant decrement that causes different values with respect to CG during the last minute. In addition, the different behavior between the most and the least variable side of MS in terms of timing effects on the range of motion and the variability confirms that prolonged walking differently affects the two lower limb sides [
47]. By analyzing the gait variability, the difference between CG and the most variable lower limb side of MS can be observed from the second minute for the hip and the knee joint, while only during the last two minutes for the ankle. Thus, we can assess that prolonged walking affects differently the lower limb joint when considering the gait variability; in fact, hip joint appears to be the first one to manifest gait deterioration. Since it is already shown that greater variability may be caused by an additional activity of an antagonist [
13], we can speculate that the antagonist muscles involved in the movement of hip joint generate an extra strength due to the motor coordination disrupted by the fatigue. This explanation could be reasonable since it was shown that excessive strength of the gluteus was usually produced by patients with MS also for the execution of daily life activity [
50]. Regarding the effects on gait asymmetry, similar outcomes to the ROM were found; in fact, prolonged walking early affects knee joint, from the second minute, and ankle joint, from third minute; while only during the last minute at the hip joint level. Thus, we can speculate that the peripheral muscle fatigue, and more specifically the consequent altered corticospinal triggering and reduced muscle oxidative capacity [
51], leads to an increase of gait asymmetry especially for the muscles involved in the movement of the knee and the ankle. Finally, the statistical differences found for all joints and all parameters related to the Δ
max testify that the fatigability affected both range of motion, gait variability, and gait asymmetry, causing a general gait deterioration. This effect can be ascribed to the compensatory mechanism, typical of MS when performing easy motor task that is, instead, corrupted by fatigability [
13].
As concerning the correlation with the EDSS score, we can assess that the synthetic indices computed for the assessment of fatigue effects on gait asymmetry of the hip joint and the maximum difference observed for the mROM related to hip and ankle can be considered as useful tools for the quantification of clinical disability since they strongly and significantly correlated with the clinical score. This finding confirms that the evaluation of kinematic asymmetry and gait deterioration in terms of ROM variations could represent a valuable method to quantitatively measure pathology severity, as also demonstrated in other neuromuscular diseases [
52].
To summarize, the results of this study clearly depict that prolonged walking causes in MS patients changes in gait patterns with respect to healthy subjects in terms of: (i) variability of range of motion; (ii) increase of gait variability; (iii) increase of gait asymmetry; and (iv) indices related to the gait asymmetry of hip and maximum difference of mROM related to hip and ankle strongly correlated with the EDSS score. In addition, differences with respect to the healthy subjects are amplified during the execution of the task [
42].
As a conclusion, we want also to provide some guidelines for the implementation of specific protocols for testing the gait deterioration caused by prolonged walking. Our outcomes permit to assess that a 2-min walking test can be used to quantify the effects only if the ROM of ankle or the gait variability at the hip level are the variables of interest. As a consequence, the absence of statistical difference found in [
23] in terms of blood pressure and heart rate when comparing data gathered from a 2-min walking test and a 6MWT cannot be extended also to all the kinematic parameters. Nevertheless, a shorter walking test could be asked to patients with a high level of disability, i.e., EDSS > 4, since a 6MWT could be arduous to be performed by these patients. Thus, we can speculate that the selection of the walking time of the experimental protocol should be a trade-off between the capability of patients and the variable to examine; in fact, not one of the here examined parameters could be neglected during an instrumented gait analysis, since gait variability and gait asymmetry are shown to be independent factors in assessing gait quality [
53]. In addition, the evaluation of all lower limb joints appears to be mandatory, since multiple sclerosis differently affects them, especially in minimally impaired patients [
54].