PMO Precision Medicine Ontology

Last uploaded: December 16, 2020
Preferred Name

Waddling Gait

Synonyms
Definitions

Weakness of the hip girdle and upper thigh muscles, for instance in myopathies, leads to an instability of the pelvis on standing and walking. If the muscles extending the hip joint are affected, the posture in that joint becomes flexed and lumbar lordosis increases. The patients usually have difficulties standing up from a sitting position. Due to weakness in the gluteus medius muscle, the hip on the side of the swinging leg drops with each step (referred to as Trendelenburg sign). The gait appears waddling. The patients frequently attempt to counteract the dropping of the hip on the swinging side by bending the trunk towards the side which is in the stance phase (in the German language literature this is referred to as Duchenne sign). Similar gait patterns can be caused by orthopedic conditions when the origin and the insertion site of the gluteus medius muscle are closer to each other than normal, for instance due to a posttraumatic elevation of the trochanter or pseudarthrosis of the femoral neck.

ID

http://www.phoc.org.cn/pmo/class/PMO_00010971

Database_Cross_Reference

SNMI:F-18240

SNOMEDCT_US:271706000

HPO:HP:0002515

SNOMEDCT_US:80043007

Definition

Weakness of the hip girdle and upper thigh muscles, for instance in myopathies, leads to an instability of the pelvis on standing and walking. If the muscles extending the hip joint are affected, the posture in that joint becomes flexed and lumbar lordosis increases. The patients usually have difficulties standing up from a sitting position. Due to weakness in the gluteus medius muscle, the hip on the side of the swinging leg drops with each step (referred to as Trendelenburg sign). The gait appears waddling. The patients frequently attempt to counteract the dropping of the hip on the swinging side by bending the trunk towards the side which is in the stance phase (in the German language literature this is referred to as Duchenne sign). Similar gait patterns can be caused by orthopedic conditions when the origin and the insertion site of the gluteus medius muscle are closer to each other than normal, for instance due to a posttraumatic elevation of the trochanter or pseudarthrosis of the femoral neck.

label

Waddling Gait

MCID

MC00078102

PMOID

PMO:00010971

prefixIRI

pmo:PMO_00010971

prefLabel

Waddling Gait

Synonym

Clown's gait (finding)

Waddling walk

'Waddling' gait

Waddling gait

Clown's gait

Tree Number

T3.17.1.1.18.9

subClassOf

http://www.phoc.org.cn/pmo/class/PMO_00010935

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