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1.
J Neurophysiol ; 2024 Sep 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39259893

RESUMO

The signature of cognitive involvement in gait control has rarely been studied using both kinematic and neuromuscular features. The present study aimed to address this gap. Twenty-four healthy young adults walked on an instrumented treadmill in a virtual environment under two optic flow conditions: normal (NOF) and perturbed (POF, continuous mediolateral pseudorandom oscillations). Each condition was performed under single-task and dual-task conditions of increasing difficulty (1-, 2-, 3-back). Subjective mental workload (raw NASA-TLX), cognitive performance (mean reaction time and d-prime), kinematic (steadiness, variability and complexity in the mediolateral and anteroposterior directions) and neuromuscular (duration and variability of motor primitives) control of gait were assessed. The cognitive performance and the number and composition of motor modules were unaffected by simultaneous walking, regardless of the optic flow condition. Kinematic and neuromuscular variability was greater under POF compared to NOF conditions. Young adults sought to counteract POF by rapidly correcting task-relevant gait fluctuations. The depletion of cognitive resources through dual-tasking led to reduced kinematic and neuromuscular variability and this occurred to the same extent regardless of simultaneous working memory (WM) load. Increasing WM load led to a prioritization of gait control in the mediolateral direction over the anteroposterior direction. The impact of POF on kinematic variability (step velocity) was reduced when a cognitive task was performed simultaneously, but this phenomenon was no modulated by WM load. Collectively, these results shed important light on how young adults adjust the processes involved in goal-directed locomotion when exposed to varying levels of task and environmental constraints.

2.
Gait Posture ; 114: 48-54, 2024 Aug 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39236422

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Children with cerebral palsy (CP) often exhibit altered selective motor control during gait (SMCg). Ankle-foot-orthoses (AFOs) are used in this population to improve gait, by reducing the degrees of freedom at the ankle joint. However, the specific impact of AFOs on SMCg and whether this effect is more related to gait deviations or motor development remains unclear. RESEARCH QUESTION: Do AFOs impact SMCg, and is the change related to joint kinematics or age? METHODS: Gait analysis data from 53 children and adolescents with spastic CP, walking both barefoot and with AFOs, were included. Electromyography data from six lower-limb muscles, and lower limb joint kinematics were analyzed for both walking conditions. SMCg was quantified by the total variance in electromyography activity accounted for by one synergy (tVAF1), where an increase in tVAF1 indicates a decrease in SMCg. Kinematic gait deviation was assessed using the Gait-Profile-Score (GPS) and sagittal plane ankle Gait-Variable-Score (ankle-GVS). All analyses were performed for the more clinically involved leg only. RESULTS: Walking with AFOs resulted in a mean increase in tVAF1 of 0.02±0.07 (p=0.015) and a median increase in ankle-GVS of 3.4º (p>0.001). No significant changes were observed in GPS, and no correlation was found between the changes in tVAF1 and ankle-GVS. A significant positive moderate correlation was found between the change in tVAF1 and age, even with ankle-GVS as a covariate (r=0.45; p>0.001). SIGNIFICANCE: Walking with an AFO resulted in a small decrease in SMCg, with large inter-participant variability. Younger participants showed a greater decrease in SMCg, which may indicate greater neuromuscular plasticity in early developmental stages.

3.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 18493, 2024 08 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39122740

RESUMO

This study investigated how muscle synergies adapt in response to unexpected changes in object weight during lifting tasks. The aim was to discover which motor control strategies individuals use to maintain their grasping performance. Muscle synergies were extracted from the muscle activity of fifteen healthy participants who lifted objects of identical appearance but varying weights in a randomized order, which introduced artificial perturbations. Reaching and manipulation phases of object lifting were analyzed using constrained non-negative matrix factorization and k-means clustering. Participants exhibited a perturbation-independent and thus consistent recruitment of spatial synergy components, while significant adaptations in muscle synergy activation occurred in response to unexpected perturbations. Perturbations caused by unexpectedly heavy objects led to delayed and gradual increases in muscle synergy activation until the force required to lift the object was reached. In contrast, perturbations caused by lighter objects led to reductions in excess muscle synergy activation occurring later. Sensorimotor control maintains the modularity of muscle synergies. Even when external mechanical perturbations occur, the grasping performance is preserved, and control is adapted solely through muscle synergy activation. These results suggest that using pure spatial synergy components as control signals for myoelectric arm prostheses may prevent them from malfunctioning due to external perturbations.


Assuntos
Força da Mão , Músculo Esquelético , Humanos , Masculino , Força da Mão/fisiologia , Músculo Esquelético/fisiologia , Adulto , Feminino , Adulto Jovem , Eletromiografia , Adaptação Fisiológica , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Desempenho Psicomotor/fisiologia
4.
J Appl Physiol (1985) ; 137(4): 835-847, 2024 Oct 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39024407

RESUMO

This cross-sectional study aims to elucidate the neural mechanisms underlying the control of knee extension forces in individuals with anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR). Eleven soccer players with ACLR and nine control players performed unilateral isometric knee extensions at 10% and 30% of their maximum voluntary force (MVF). Simultaneous recordings of high-density surface electromyography (HDEMG) and force output were conducted for each lower limb, and HDEMG data from the vastus lateralis (VL) and vastus medialis (VM) muscles were decomposed into individual motor unit spike trains. Force steadiness was estimated using the coefficient of variation of force. An intramuscular coherence analysis was adopted to estimate the common synaptic input (CSI) converging to each muscle. A factor analysis was applied to investigate the neural strategies underlying the control of synergistic motor neuron clusters, referred to as motor unit modes. Force steadiness was similar between lower limbs. However, motor neurons innervating the VL on the reconstructed side received a lower proportion of CSI at low-frequency bandwidths (<5 Hz) compared with the unaffected lower limbs (P < 0.01). Furthermore, the reconstructed side demonstrated a higher proportion of motor units associated with the neural input common to the synergistic muscle, as compared with the unaffected lower limbs (P < 0.01). These findings indicate that the VL muscle of reconstructed lower limbs contribute marginally to force steadiness and that a plastic rearrangement in synergistic clusters of motor units involved in the control of knee extension forces is evident following ACLR.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Chronic quadriceps dysfunction is common after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR). We investigated voluntary force control strategies by estimating common inputs to motor neurons innervating the vastii muscles. Our results showed attenuated common inputs to the vastus lateralis and plastic rearrangements in functional clusters of motor neurons modulating knee extension forces in the reconstructed limb. These findings suggest neuroplastic adjustments following ACLR that may occur to fine-tune the control of quadriceps forces.


Assuntos
Reconstrução do Ligamento Cruzado Anterior , Eletromiografia , Neurônios Motores , Plasticidade Neuronal , Músculo Quadríceps , Humanos , Reconstrução do Ligamento Cruzado Anterior/métodos , Masculino , Adulto Jovem , Músculo Quadríceps/inervação , Músculo Quadríceps/fisiopatologia , Neurônios Motores/fisiologia , Eletromiografia/métodos , Adulto , Estudos Transversais , Plasticidade Neuronal/fisiologia , Contração Isométrica/fisiologia , Músculo Esquelético/fisiologia , Músculo Esquelético/inervação , Músculo Esquelético/fisiopatologia , Sinapses/fisiologia
5.
J Neural Eng ; 21(4)2024 Aug 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39008975

RESUMO

Objective.Non-invasive, high-density electromyography (HD-EMG) has emerged as a useful tool to collect a range of neurophysiological motor information. Recent studies have demonstrated changes in EMG features that occur after stroke, which correlate with functional ability, highlighting their potential use as biomarkers. However, previous studies have largely explored these EMG features in isolation with individual electrodes to assess gross movements, limiting their potential clinical utility. This study aims to predict hand function of stroke survivors by combining interpretable features extracted from a wearable HD-EMG forearm sleeve.Approach.Here, able-bodied (N= 7) and chronic stroke subjects (N= 7) performed 12 functional hand and wrist movements while HD-EMG was recorded using a wearable sleeve. A variety of HD-EMG features, or views, were decomposed to assess alterations in motor coordination.Main Results.Stroke subjects, on average, had higher co-contraction and reduced muscle coupling when attempting to open their hand and actuate their thumb. Additionally, muscle synergies decomposed in the stroke population were relatively preserved, with a large spatial overlap in composition of matched synergies. Alterations in synergy composition demonstrated reduced coupling between digit extensors and muscles that actuate the thumb, as well as an increase in flexor activity in the stroke group. Average synergy activations during movements revealed differences in coordination, highlighting overactivation of antagonist muscles and compensatory strategies. When combining co-contraction and muscle synergy features, the first principal component was strongly correlated with upper-extremity Fugl Meyer hand sub-score of stroke participants (R2= 0.86). Principal component embeddings of individual features revealed interpretable measures of motor coordination and muscle coupling alterations.Significance.These results demonstrate the feasibility of predicting motor function through features decomposed from a wearable HD-EMG sleeve, which could be leveraged to improve stroke research and clinical care.


Assuntos
Eletromiografia , Mãos , Movimento , Acidente Vascular Cerebral , Dispositivos Eletrônicos Vestíveis , Humanos , Eletromiografia/métodos , Eletromiografia/instrumentação , Acidente Vascular Cerebral/fisiopatologia , Masculino , Mãos/fisiopatologia , Mãos/fisiologia , Feminino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Idoso , Movimento/fisiologia , Sobreviventes , Adulto , Doença Crônica , Músculo Esquelético/fisiopatologia , Músculo Esquelético/fisiologia , Desempenho Psicomotor/fisiologia
6.
Cogn Neurodyn ; 18(3): 1119-1133, 2024 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38826662

RESUMO

Myoelectric hand prostheses are effective tools for upper limb amputees to regain hand functions. Much progress has been made with pattern recognition algorithms to recognize surface electromyography (sEMG) patterns, but few attentions was placed on the amputees' motor learning process. Many potential myoelectric prostheses users could not fully master the control or had declined performance over time. It is possible that learning to produce distinct and consistent muscle activation patterns with the residual limb could help amputees better control the myoelectric prosthesis. In this study, we observed longitudinal effect of motor skill learning with 2 amputees who have developed alternative muscle activation patterns in response to the same set of target prosthetic actions. During a 10-week program, amputee participants were trained to produce distinct and constant muscle activations with visual feedback of live sEMG and without interaction with prosthesis. At the end, their sEMG patterns were different from each other and from non-amputee control groups. For certain intended hand motion, gradually reducing root mean square (RMS) variance was observed. The learning effect was also assessed with a CNN-LSTM mixture classifier designed for mobile sEMG pattern recognition. The classification accuracy had a rising trend over time, implicating potential performance improvement of myoelectric prosthesis control. A follow-up session took place 6 months after the program and showed lasting effect of the motor skill learning in terms of sEMG pattern classification accuracy. The results indicated that with proper feedback training, amputees could learn unique muscle activation patterns that allow them to trigger intended prosthesis functions, and the original motor control scheme is updated. The effect of such motor skill learning could help to improve myoelectric prosthetic control performance.

7.
Front Bioeng Biotechnol ; 12: 1389031, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38827035

RESUMO

Introduction: Surgical planning and custom prosthesis design for pelvic cancer patients are challenging due to the unique clinical characteristics of each patient and the significant amount of pelvic bone and hip musculature often removed. Limb-sparing internal hemipelvectomy surgery with custom prosthesis reconstruction has become a viable option for this patient population. However, little is known about how post-surgery walking function and neural control change from pre-surgery conditions. Methods: This case study combined comprehensive walking data (video motion capture, ground reaction, and electromyography) with personalized neuromusculoskeletal computer models to provide a thorough assessment of pre- to post-surgery changes in walking function (ground reactions, joint motions, and joint moments) and neural control (muscle synergies) for a single pelvic sarcoma patient who received internal hemipelvectomy surgery with custom prosthesis reconstruction. Pre- and post-surgery walking function and neural control were quantified using pre- and post-surgery neuromusculoskeletal models, respectively, whose pelvic anatomy, joint functional axes, muscle-tendon properties, and muscle synergy controls were personalized using the participant's pre-and post-surgery walking and imaging data. For the post-surgery model, virtual surgery was performed to emulate the implemented surgical decisions, including removal of hip muscles and implantation of a custom prosthesis with total hip replacement. Results: The participant's post-surgery walking function was marked by a slower self-selected walking speed coupled with several compensatory mechanisms necessitated by lost or impaired hip muscle function, while the participant's post-surgery neural control demonstrated a dramatic change in coordination strategy (as evidenced by modified time-invariant synergy vectors) with little change in recruitment timing (as evidenced by conserved time-varying synergy activations). Furthermore, the participant's post-surgery muscle activations were fitted accurately using his pre-surgery synergy activations but fitted poorly using his pre-surgery synergy vectors. Discussion: These results provide valuable information about which aspects of post-surgery walking function could potentially be improved through modifications to surgical decisions, custom prosthesis design, or rehabilitation protocol, as well as how computational simulations could be formulated to predict post-surgery walking function reliably given a patient's pre-surgery walking data and the planned surgical decisions and custom prosthesis design.

8.
Front Robot AI ; 11: 1393637, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38835930

RESUMO

We recently developed a biomimetic robotic eye with six independent tendons, each controlled by their own rotatory motor, and with insertions on the eye ball that faithfully mimic the biomechanics of the human eye. We constructed an accurate physical computational model of this system, and learned to control its nonlinear dynamics by optimising a cost that penalised saccade inaccuracy, movement duration, and total energy expenditure of the motors. To speed up the calculations, the physical simulator was approximated by a recurrent neural network (NARX). We showed that the system can produce realistic eye movements that closely resemble human saccades in all directions: their nonlinear main-sequence dynamics (amplitude-peak eye velocity and duration relationships), cross-coupling of the horizontal and vertical movement components leading to approximately straight saccade trajectories, and the 3D kinematics that restrict 3D eye orientations to a plane (Listing's law). Interestingly, the control algorithm had organised the motors into appropriate agonist-antagonist muscle pairs, and the motor signals for the eye resembled the well-known pulse-step characteristics that have been reported for monkey motoneuronal activity. We here fully analyse the eye-movement properties produced by the computational model across the entire oculomotor range and the underlying control signals. We argue that our system may shed new light on the neural control signals and their couplings within the final neural pathways of the primate oculomotor system, and that an optimal control principle may account for a wide variety of oculomotor behaviours. The generated data are publicly available at https://data.ru.nl/collections/di/dcn/DSC_626870_0003_600.

9.
Sensors (Basel) ; 24(12)2024 Jun 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38931719

RESUMO

Sensor-based assessments in medical practice and rehabilitation include the measurement of physiological signals such as EEG, EMG, ECG, heart rate, and NIRS, and the recording of movement kinematics and interaction forces. Such measurements are commonly employed in clinics with the aim of assessing patients' pathologies, but so far some of them have found full exploitation mainly for research purposes. In fact, even though the data they allow to gather may shed light on physiopathology and mechanisms underlying motor recovery in rehabilitation, their practical use in the clinical environment is mainly devoted to research studies, with a very reduced impact on clinical practice. This is especially the case for muscle synergies, a well-known method for the evaluation of motor control in neuroscience based on multichannel EMG recordings. In this paper, considering neuromotor rehabilitation as one of the most important scenarios for exploiting novel methods to assess motor control, the main challenges and future perspectives for the standard clinical adoption of muscle synergy analysis are reported and critically discussed.


Assuntos
Eletromiografia , Músculo Esquelético , Humanos , Fenômenos Biomecânicos/fisiologia , Eletromiografia/métodos , Movimento/fisiologia , Músculo Esquelético/fisiologia
10.
Exp Brain Res ; 242(8): 1881-1902, 2024 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38874594

RESUMO

Muscle synergies are defined as coordinated recruitment of groups of muscles with specific activation balances and time profiles aimed at generating task-specific motor commands. While muscle synergies in postural control have been investigated primarily in reactive balance conditions, the neuromechanical contribution of muscle synergies during voluntary control of upright standing is still unclear. In this study, muscle synergies were investigated during the generation of isometric force at the trunk during the maintenance of standing posture. Participants were asked to maintain the steady-state upright standing posture while pulling forces of different magnitudes were applied at the level at the waist in eight horizontal directions. Muscle synergies were extracted by nonnegative matrix factorization from sixteen lower limb and trunk muscles. An average of 5-6 muscle synergies were sufficient to account for a wide variety of EMG waveforms associated with changes in the magnitude and direction of pulling forces. A cluster analysis partitioned the muscle synergies of the participants into a large group of clusters according to their similarity, indicating the use of a subjective combination of muscles to generate a multidirectional force vector in standing. Furthermore, we found a participant-specific distribution in the values of cosine directional tuning parameters of synergy amplitude coefficients, suggesting the existence of individual neuromechanical strategies to stabilize the whole-body posture. Our findings provide a starting point for the development of novel diagnostic tools to assess muscle coordination in postural control and lay the foundation for potential applications of muscle synergies in rehabilitation.


Assuntos
Eletromiografia , Contração Isométrica , Músculo Esquelético , Equilíbrio Postural , Posição Ortostática , Humanos , Masculino , Músculo Esquelético/fisiologia , Adulto Jovem , Adulto , Equilíbrio Postural/fisiologia , Feminino , Contração Isométrica/fisiologia , Fenômenos Biomecânicos/fisiologia , Postura/fisiologia
11.
Cogn Neurodyn ; 18(2): 349-356, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38699620

RESUMO

Muscle synergies have been hypothesized as specific predefined motor primitives that the central nervous system can reduce the complexity of motor control by using them, but how these are expressed in brain activity is ambiguous yet. The main purpose of this paper is to develop synergy-based neural decoding of motor primitives, so for the first time, brain activity and muscle synergy map of the upper extremity was investigated in the activity of daily living movements. To find the relationship between brain activities and muscle synergies, electroencephalogram (EEG) and electromyogram (EMG) signals were acquired simultaneously during activities of daily living. To extract the maximum correlation of neural commands with muscle synergies, application of a combined partial least squares and canonical correlation analysis (PLS-CCA) method was proposed. The Elman neural network was used to decode the relationship between extracted motor commands and muscle synergies. The performance of proposed method was evaluated with tenfold cross-validation and muscle synergy estimation of brain activity with R, VAF, and MSE of 84 ± 2.6%, 70 ± 4.7%, and 0.00011 ± 0.00002 were quantified respectively. Furthermore, the similarity between actual and reconstructed muscle activations was achieved more than 92% for correlation coefficient. To compare with the existing methods, our results showed significantly more accuracy of the model performance. Our results confirm that use of the expression of muscle synergies in brain activity can estimate the neural decoding performance for motor control that can be used to develop neurorehabilitation tools such as neuroprosthesis.

12.
Comput Methods Programs Biomed ; 251: 108217, 2024 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38744059

RESUMO

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: A new direction in the study of motor control was opened about two decades ago with the introduction of a model for the generation of motor commands as combination of muscle synergies. Muscle synergies provide a simple yet quantitative framework for analyzing the hierarchical and modular architecture of the human motor system. However, to gain insights on the functional role of muscle synergies, they should be related to the task space. The recently introduced mixed-matrix factorization (MMF) algorithm extends the standard approach for synergy extraction based on non-negative matrix factorization (NMF) allowing to factorize data constituted by a mixture of non-negative variables (e.g. EMGs) and unconstrained variables (e.g. kinematics, naturally including both positive and negative values). The kinematic-muscular synergies identified by MMF provide a direct link between muscle synergies and the task space. In this contribution, we support the adoption of MMF through a Matlab toolbox for the extraction of kinematic-muscular synergies and a set of practical guidelines to allow biomedical researchers and clinicians to exploit the potential of this novel approach. METHODS: MMF is implemented in the SynergyAnalyzer toolbox using an object-oriented approach. In addition to the MMF algorithm, the toolbox includes standard methods for synergy extraction (NMF and PCA), as well as methods for pre-processing EMG and kinematic data, and for plotting data and synergies. RESULTS: As an example of MMF application, kinematic-muscular synergies were extracted from EMG and kinematic data collected during reaching movements towards 8 targets on the sagittal plane. Instructions and command lines to achieve such results are illustrated in detail. The toolbox has been released as an open-source software on GitHub under the GNU General Public License. CONCLUSIONS: Thanks to its ease of use and adaptability to a variety of datasets, SynergyAnalyzer will facilitate the adoption of MMF to extract kinematic-muscular synergies from mixed EMG and kinematic data, a useful approach in biomedical research to better understand and characterize the functional role of muscle synergies.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Eletromiografia , Músculo Esquelético , Humanos , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Eletromiografia/métodos , Músculo Esquelético/fisiologia , Software
13.
Exp Gerontol ; 191: 112424, 2024 Jun 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38604252

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Reactive stepping capacity to recover from a loss of balance declines with aging, which increases the risk of falling. To gain insight into the underlying mechanisms, we investigated whether muscle coordination patterns of reactive stepping differed between healthy young and older individuals. METHODS: We performed a cross-sectional study between 15 healthy young and 14 healthy older adults. They recovered from 200 multidirectional platform translations that evoked reactive stepping responses. We determined spatiotemporal step variables and used muscle synergy analysis to characterize stance- and swing-leg muscle coordination patterns from the start of perturbation until foot landing. RESULTS: We observed delayed step onsets in older individuals, without further spatiotemporal differences. Muscle synergy structure was not different between young and older individuals, but age-related differences were observed in the time-varying synergy activation patterns. In anterior-posterior directions, the older individuals demonstrated significantly enhanced early swing-leg synergy activation consistent with non-stepping behavior. In addition, around step onset they demonstrated increased levels of synergy coactivation (mainly around the ankle) in lateral and anterior directions, which did not appear to hamper foot clearance. CONCLUSION: Although synergy structure was not affected by age, the delayed step onsets and the enhanced early synergy recruitment point at a relative bias towards non-stepping behavior in older adults. They may need more time for accumulating information on the direction of perturbation and making the corresponding sensorimotor transformations before initiating the step. Future work may investigate whether perturbation-based training improves these age-related deficits.


Assuntos
Envelhecimento , Músculo Esquelético , Equilíbrio Postural , Humanos , Estudos Transversais , Masculino , Idoso , Feminino , Músculo Esquelético/fisiologia , Equilíbrio Postural/fisiologia , Envelhecimento/fisiologia , Adulto Jovem , Adulto , Eletromiografia , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Acidentes por Quedas/prevenção & controle , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Caminhada/fisiologia
14.
Hum Mov Sci ; 95: 103200, 2024 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38461747

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Considering the relationship between aging and neuromuscular control decline, early detection of age-related changes can ensure that timely interventions are implemented to attenuate or restore neuromuscular deficits. The dynamic motor control index (DMCI), a measure based on variance accounted for (VAF) by one muscle synergy (MS), is a metric used to assess age-related changes in neuromuscular control. The aim of the study was to investigate the use of one-synergy VAF, and consecutively DMCI, in assessing age-related changes in neuromuscular control over a range of exercises with varying difficulty. METHODS: Thirty-one subjects walked on a flat and inclined treadmill, as well as performed forward and lateral stepping up tasks. Motion and muscular activity were recorded, and muscle synergy analysis was conducted using one-synergy VAF, DMCI, and number of synergies. RESULTS: Difference between older and younger group was observed for one-synergy VAF, DMCI for forward stepping up task (one-synergy VAF difference of 2.45 (0.22, 4.68) and DMCI of 9.21 (0.81, 17.61), p = 0.033), but not for lateral stepping up or walking. CONCLUSION: The use of VAF based metrics and specifically DMCI, rather than number of MS, in combination with stepping forward exercise can provide a low-cost and easy to implement approach for assessing neuromuscular control in clinical settings.


Assuntos
Envelhecimento , Músculo Esquelético , Caminhada , Humanos , Masculino , Feminino , Adulto , Idoso , Envelhecimento/fisiologia , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Músculo Esquelético/fisiologia , Caminhada/fisiologia , Adulto Jovem , Eletromiografia , Teste de Esforço , Fenômenos Biomecânicos/fisiologia , Fatores Etários
15.
Cureus ; 16(2): e54649, 2024 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38523944

RESUMO

Background Identifying altered trunk control is critical for treating extension-related low back pain (ERLBP), a common subgroup classified by clinical manifestations. The changed coordination of trunk muscles within this group during particular trunk tasks is still not clearly understood. Objectives The objective of this study is to investigate trunk muscle coordination during 11 trunk movement and stability tasks in individuals with ERLBP compared to non-low back pain (LBP) participants. Methods Thirteen individuals with ERLBP and non-LBP performed 11 trunk movement and stability tasks. We recorded the electromyographic activities of six back and abdominal muscles bilaterally. Trunk muscle coordination was assessed using the non-negative matrix factorization (NMF) method to identify trunk muscle synergies. Results The number of synergies in the ERLBP group during the cross-extension and backward bend tasks was significantly higher than in the non-LBP group (p<0.05). The cluster analysis identified the two trunk synergies for each task with strikingly similar muscle activation patterns between groups. In contrast, the ERLBP group exhibited additional trunk muscle synergies that were not identified in the non-LBP group. The number of synergies in the other tasks did not differ between groups (p>0.05). Conclusion Individuals with ERLBP presented directionally specific alterations in trunk muscle synergies that were considered as increased coactivations of multiple trunk muscles. These altered patterns may contribute to the excessive stabilization of and the high frequency of hyperextension in the spine associated with the development and persistence of ERLBP.

16.
Eur J Appl Physiol ; 124(7): 2035-2044, 2024 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38383795

RESUMO

PURPOSE: A broad functional movement repertoire is crucial for engaging in physical activity and reducing the risk of injury, both of which are central aspects of lifelong health. As a fundamental exercise in both recreational and rehabilitative training regimes, the bipedal squat (SQBp) incorporates many everyday movement patterns. Crucially, SQBp can only be considered functional if the practitioner can meet the coordinative demands. Many factors affect coordinative aspects of an exercise, most notably external load. Since compound movements are assumed to be organized in a synergistic manner, we employed muscle synergy analysis to examine differences in muscle synergy properties between various external load levels during SQBp. METHODS: Ten healthy male recreational athletes were enrolled in the present study. Each participant performed three sets of ten SQBp on a smith machine at three submaximal load levels (50%, 62.5%, and 75% of 3 repetition maximum) across three non-consecutive days. Muscle activity was recorded from 12 prime movers of SQBp by way of electromyography (EMG). Muscle synergies were analyzed in terms of temporal activation patterns, i.e., waveform, as well as the relative input of each muscle into individual synergies, i.e., weight contribution. RESULTS: Waveforms of muscle synergies did not differ between loads. Weight contributions showed significant differences between load levels, albeit only for the gastrocnemius muscle in a single synergy. CONCLUSION: Taken together, our results imply mostly stable spatiotemporal composition of muscle activity during SQBp, underlining the importance of technical competence during compound movement performance in athletic and rehabilitative settings.


Assuntos
Músculo Esquelético , Humanos , Masculino , Músculo Esquelético/fisiologia , Adulto , Movimento/fisiologia , Contração Muscular/fisiologia , Adulto Jovem , Suporte de Carga/fisiologia , Eletromiografia , Exercício Físico/fisiologia
17.
Bioengineering (Basel) ; 11(2)2024 Feb 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38391659

RESUMO

Four to five muscle synergies account for children's locomotion and appear to be consistent across alterations in speed and slopes. Backpack carriage induces alterations in gait kinematics in healthy children, raising questions regarding the clinical consequences related to orthopedic and neurological diseases and ergonomics. However, to support clinical decisions and characterize backpack carriage, muscle synergies can help with understanding the alterations induced in this condition at the motor control level. In this study, we investigated how children adjust the recruitment of motor patterns during locomotion, when greater muscular demands are required (backpack carriage). Twenty healthy male children underwent an instrumental gait analysis and muscle synergies extraction during three walking conditions: self-selected, fast and load conditions. In the fast condition, a reduction in the number of synergies (three to four) was needed for reconstructing the EMG signal with the same accuracy as in the other conditions (three to five). Synergies were grouped in only four clusters in the fast condition, while five clusters were needed for the self-selected condition. The right number of clusters was not clearly identified in the load condition. Speed and backpack carriage altered nearly every spatial-temporal parameter of gait, whereas kinematic alterations reflected mainly hip and pelvis adaptations. Although the synergistic patterns were consistent across conditions, indicating a similar motor pattern in different conditions, the fast condition required fewer synergies for reconstructing the EMG signal with the same level of accuracy.

18.
J Neurophysiol ; 130(5): 1194-1199, 2023 11 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37791384

RESUMO

Motor skill learning requires the acquisition of novel muscle patterns and a new control policy-a process that requires time. In contrast, motor adaptation often requires only the adjustment of existing muscle patterns-a fast process. By altering the mapping of muscle activations onto cursor movements in a myoelectrically controlled virtual environment, we are able to create perturbations that require either the recombination of existing muscle synergies (compatible virtual surgery) or the learning of novel muscle patterns (incompatible virtual surgery). We investigated whether adaptation to a compatible surgery is affected by prior exposure to an incompatible surgery, i.e., a motor skill learning task. We found that adaptation to a compatible surgery was characterized by a decrease in the quality of muscle pattern reconstructions using the original synergies and an increase in reaction times only after exposure to an incompatible surgery. In contrast, prior exposure to a compatible surgery did not affect the learning process required to overcome an incompatible surgery. The fact that exposure to an incompatible surgery had a profound effect on the muscle patterns during the adaptation to a subsequent compatible surgery and not vice versa suggests that null space exploration, possibly combined with an explicit exploration strategy, is engaged during exposure to an incompatible surgery and remains enhanced during a new adaptation episode. We conclude that motor skill learning, requiring novel muscle activation patterns, leads to changes in the exploration strategy employed during a subsequent perturbation.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Motor skill learning requires the acquisition of novel muscle patterns, whereas motor adaptation requires adjusting existing ones. We wondered whether training a new motor skill affects motor adaptation strategies. We show that learning an incompatible perturbation, a complex skill requiring new muscle synergies, affects the muscle patterns observed during adaption to a compatible perturbation, which requires adjusting the existing synergies. Our results suggest that motor skill learning results in persistent changes in the exploration strategy.


Assuntos
Destreza Motora , Músculo Esquelético , Músculo Esquelético/fisiologia , Destreza Motora/fisiologia , Movimento/fisiologia , Aprendizagem/fisiologia , Tempo de Reação , Adaptação Fisiológica/fisiologia , Desempenho Psicomotor/fisiologia
19.
Front Rehabil Sci ; 4: 1222174, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37841066

RESUMO

Spinal cord injury (SCI) can cause paralysis of trunk and hip musculature that negatively impacts seated balance and ability to lean away from an upright posture and interact fully with the environment. Constant levels of electrical stimulation of peripheral nerves can activate typically paralyzed muscles and aid in maintaining a single upright seated posture. However, in the absence of a feedback controller, such seated postures and leaning motions are inherently unstable and unable to respond to perturbations. Three individuals with motor complete SCI who had previously received a neuroprosthesis capable of activating the hip and trunk musculature volunteered for this study. Subject-specific muscle synergies were identified through system identification of the lumbar moments produced via neural stimulation. Synergy-based calculations determined the real-time stimulation parameters required to assume leaning postures. When combined with a proportional, integral, derivative (PID) feedback controller and an accelerometer to infer trunk orientation, all individuals were able to assume non-erect postures of 30-40° flexion and 15° lateral bending. Leaning postures increased forward reaching capabilities by 10.2, 46.7, and 16 cm respectively for each subject when compared with no stimulation. Additionally, the leaning controllers were able to resist perturbations of up to 90 N, and all subjects perceived the leaning postures as moderately to very stable. Implementation of leaning controllers for neuroprostheses have the potential of expanding workspaces, increasing independence, and facilitating activities of daily living for individuals with paralysis.

20.
J Neural Eng ; 20(6)2023 11 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37883969

RESUMO

Objective.Unsupervised myocontrol methods aim to create control models for myoelectric prostheses while avoiding the complications of acquiring reliable, regular, and sufficient labeled training data. A limitation of current unsupervised methods is that they fix the number of controlled prosthetic functions a priori, thus requiring an initial assessment of the user's motor skills and neglecting the development of novel motor skills over time.Approach.We developed a progressive unsupervised myocontrol (PUM) paradigm in which the user and the control model coadaptively identify distinct muscle synergies, which are then used to control arbitrarily associated myocontrol functions, each corresponding to a hand or wrist movement. The interaction starts with learning a single function and the user may request additional functions after mastering the available ones, which aligns the evolution of their motor skills with an increment in system complexity. We conducted a multi-session user study to evaluate PUM and compare it against a state-of-the-art non-progressive unsupervised alternative. Two participants with congenital upper-limb differences tested PUM, while ten non-disabled control participants tested either PUM or the non-progressive baseline. All participants engaged in myoelectric control of a virtual hand and wrist.Main results.PUM enabled autonomous learning of three myocontrol functions for participants with limb differences, and of all four available functions for non-disabled subjects, using both existing or newly identified muscle synergies. Participants with limb differences achieved similar success rates to non-disabled ones on myocontrol tests, but faced greater difficulties in internalizing new motor skills and exhibited slightly inferior movement quality. The performance was comparable with either PUM or the non-progressive baseline for the group of non-disabled participants.Significance.The PUM paradigm enables users to autonomously learn to operate the myocontrol system, adapts to the users' varied preexisting motor skills, and supports the further development of those skills throughout practice.


Assuntos
Membros Artificiais , Extremidade Superior , Humanos , Eletromiografia/métodos , Mãos , Punho , Destreza Motora/fisiologia
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