This article and any supplementary material should be cited as follows: Linberg AA, Roach KE, Campbell SM, Stoneman PD, Gaunaurd IA, Raya MA, Gomez-Orozco.

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This article and any supplementary material should be cited as follows: Linberg AA, Roach KE, Campbell SM, Stoneman PD, Gaunaurd IA, Raya MA, Gomez-Orozco C, Gailey RS. Comparison of 6-minute walk test performance between male Active Duty soldiers and servicemembers with and without traumatic lower-limb loss. J Rehabil Res Dev. 2013;50(7):931–40. Slideshow Project DOI: /JRRD JSP Comparison of 6-minute walk test performance between male Active Duty soldiers and servicemembers with and without traumatic lower-limb loss Alison A. Linberg, DPT, ATC; Kathryn E. Roach, PhD, PT; MAJ (Ret) Stuart M. Campbell, MPT; COL (Ret) Paul D. Stoneman, PhD, MPT, DPT, OCS, SCS; Ignacio A. Gaunaurd, PhD, MSPT; Michele A. Raya, PhD, PT, SCS, ATC; Carlos Gomez-Orozco; Robert S. Gailey, PhD, PT

This article and any supplementary material should be cited as follows: Linberg AA, Roach KE, Campbell SM, Stoneman PD, Gaunaurd IA, Raya MA, Gomez-Orozco C, Gailey RS. Comparison of 6-minute walk test performance between male Active Duty soldiers and servicemembers with and without traumatic lower-limb loss. J Rehabil Res Dev. 2013;50(7):931–40. Slideshow Project DOI: /JRRD JSP Aim – Describe 6-minute walking test (6MWT) performance in male servicemembers (SMs) with and without limb loss and across different limb-loss levels. Relevance – Describing reference ranges for 6MWT will help clinicians develop appropriate goals for rehabilitation and document progress toward those goals.

This article and any supplementary material should be cited as follows: Linberg AA, Roach KE, Campbell SM, Stoneman PD, Gaunaurd IA, Raya MA, Gomez-Orozco C, Gailey RS. Comparison of 6-minute walk test performance between male Active Duty soldiers and servicemembers with and without traumatic lower-limb loss. J Rehabil Res Dev. 2013;50(7):931–40. Slideshow Project DOI: /JRRD JSP Method Convenience sample of male U.S. SMs – 118 with traumatic lower-limb loss. – 97 without limb loss. All participants completed 6MWT – Comparisons were made between SMs with and without limb loss and among levels of limb loss.

This article and any supplementary material should be cited as follows: Linberg AA, Roach KE, Campbell SM, Stoneman PD, Gaunaurd IA, Raya MA, Gomez-Orozco C, Gailey RS. Comparison of 6-minute walk test performance between male Active Duty soldiers and servicemembers with and without traumatic lower-limb loss. J Rehabil Res Dev. 2013;50(7):931–40. Slideshow Project DOI: /JRRD JSP Results With vs without limb loss: – Significant mean differences were found between those with and without. – Yet, substantial areas of overlap existed between all groups. Level of limb loss: – SMs with transtibial limb loss performed significantly better than those with all other levels of limb loss. – Statistically significant and clinically relevant differences between other levels of limb loss. No differences between different prosthetic components.

This article and any supplementary material should be cited as follows: Linberg AA, Roach KE, Campbell SM, Stoneman PD, Gaunaurd IA, Raya MA, Gomez-Orozco C, Gailey RS. Comparison of 6-minute walk test performance between male Active Duty soldiers and servicemembers with and without traumatic lower-limb loss. J Rehabil Res Dev. 2013;50(7):931–40. Slideshow Project DOI: /JRRD JSP Conclusion Reference ranges were established for U.S. SMs with and without various levels of limb loss. – Reference ranges will help clinicians and future young, active military and nonmilitary individuals with limb loss track progression of rehabilitation and set realistic goals to reach their full functional potential. 6MWT was able to identify functional differences between groups.