Summary
We studied the time necessary to obtain reliable kinetic data from healthy dogs trotting
on a treadmill. Ten adult male Malinois Belgian Shepherd dogs were made to trot on
an instrumented treadmill to record the ground reaction force for the entire body
and to determine the vertical force variables (peak [PFz], impulse [IFz], stride time
[Str], peak time [Tz] and contact time [Ct]). Data were collected from each dog, during
three sequences per day, on three consecutive days. In order to determine the contribution
of the ‘sequence’, ‘day of measurement’, and ‘dog’ factors and the percentage of variance
attributable to dogs, data were analyzed with a linear mixed model. The curve shapes
were similar to those obtained with a floor-mounted force platform. Intra-dog coefficients
of variation were between 1.57 and 3.46%. Inter-dog coefficients of variation were
between 4.18 and 7.82%. A sequence effect was not noted. Each day had a significant
effect on all of the data. All variables differed significantly from the first day
compared to the other days. However there was not any difference between days 2 and
3. The percentage of the total variance attributable to dogs ranged from 37 to 88%.
The coefficients of variation were lower than those obtained with common protocols.
The treadmill locomotion remained consistent during a single session. Even if interday
variation needs to be accounted for, reliable data can still be obtained after a single
training session. The majority of the variation was attributable to the dog. An instrumented
treadmill may be used for kinetic analysis.
Keywords
Kinetics - dog - treadmill - habituation - gait analysis