Walking abnormalities are unusual and uncontrollable walking patterns. They are usually due to diseases or injuries to the legs, feet, brain, spinal cord, or inner ear.
Alternative Names
Gait abnormalities
Considerations
The pattern of how a person walks is called the gait. Different types of walking problems occur without a person's control. Most, but not all, are due to a physical condition.
Some walking abnormalities have been given names:
Propulsive gait -- a stooped, stiff posture with the head and neck bent forward
Scissors gait -- legs flexed slightly at the hips and knees like crouching, with the knees and thighs hitting or crossing in a scissors-like movement
Spastic gait -- a stiff, foot-dragging walk caused by a long muscle contraction on one side
Steppage gait -- foot drop where the foot hangs with the toes pointing down, causing the toes to scrape the ground while walking, requiring someone to lift the leg higher than normal when walking
Waddling gait -- a duck-like walk that may appear in childhood or later in life
Common Causes
Abnormal gait may be caused by diseases in many different areas of the body.
Damage to nerve cells in the cerebellum of the brain (cerebellar degeneration)
Medications (phenytoin and other seizure medications)
Polyneuropathy (damage to many nerves, as occurs with diabetes)
Stroke
Home Care
Treating the cause often improves the gait. For example, gait abnormalities from trauma to part of the leg will improve as the leg heals.
Physical therapy almost always helps with short-term or long-term gait disorders. Therapy will reduce the risk of falls and other injuries.
For an abnormal gait that occurs with conversion disorder, counseling and support from family members are strongly recommended.
For a propulsive gait:
Encourage the person to be as independent as possible.
Allow plenty of time for daily activities, especially walking. People with this problem are likely to fall because they have poor balance and are always trying to catch up.
Provide walking assistance for safety reasons, especially on uneven ground.
See a physical therapist for exercise therapy and walking retraining.
For a scissors gait:
People with a scissors gait often lose skin sensation. Skin care should be used to avoid skin sores.
Leg braces and in-shoe splints can help keep the foot in the right position for standing and walking. A physical therapist can supply these and provide exercise therapy, if needed.
Medications (muscle relaxers, anti-spasticity medications) can reduce the muscle overactivity.
For a spastic gait:
Exercises are encouraged.
Leg braces and in-shoe splints can help keep the foot in the right position for standing and walking. A physical therapist can supply these and provide exercise therapy, if needed.
A cane or a walker is recommended for those with poor balance.
Medications (muscle relaxers, anti-spasticity medications) can reduce the muscle overactivity.
For a steppage gait:
Get enough rest. Fatigue can often cause a person to stub a toe and fall.
Leg braces and in-shoe splints can help keep the foot in the right position for standing and walking. A physical therapist can supply these and provide exercise therapy, if needed.
For a waddling gait, follow the treatment your health care provider prescribed.
Call your health care provider if
If there is any sign of uncontrollable and unexplained gait abnormalities, call your health care provider.
What to expect at your health care provider's office
The health care provider will take a medical history and perform a physical examination.
Medical history questions may include:
Time pattern
When did this problem with walking begin?
Did it occur suddenly or gradually?
Has it become worse over time?
Quality (type of gait disturbance)
Scissors gait (flexed hips and knees, legs cross each other)
Steppage gait (foot drops, toes scrape ground)
Spastic gait (stiff, foot-dragging walk)
Propulsive gait (stooped, rigid posture, with head and neck bent forward)
Other symptoms
Is there pain?
If there is pain, is it in the muscles, joints, spine, or other location?
Is there a fever?
Is there pain in the testicles?
Does there appear to be muscle wasting (atrophy)?
Is there any paralysis?
Are there any muscle spasms?
Are there joint deformities?
Has there been a recent infection?
Medications
What medications are being taken?
Injury history
Have there been any recent or past leg injuries?
If there was a leg injury, what type? Was it a broken bone, dislocation, or burn?
Has the person had any head injuries, especially one that led to a coma?
Has the person had any spinal injuries or nerve injuries?
Illness history
Are there any known blood vessel problems?
Are there any known illnesses such as polio, meningitis, myositis, tumors, or stroke?
Have there been any recent infections, including abscesses?
The physical examination will include muscle, bone, and nervous system examination. The health care provider will decide which tests to do based on the results of the physical examination.
References
McGee S. Stance and gait. In: McGee S. Evidence-Based Physical Diagnosis. 3rd ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier Saunders; 2012:chap 6.
Review Date:
2/27/2013
Reviewed By:
Luc Jasmin, MD, PhD, Department of Neurosurgery, Cedars Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles and Department of Anatomy, University of California, San Francisco, CA. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network. Also reviewed by A.D.A.M. Health Solutions, Ebix, Inc., Editorial Team: David Zieve, MD, MHA, Bethanne Black, Stephanie Slon, and Nissi Wang.