http://www.jneuroengrehab.com/content/12/1/39/abstract
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2015, 12:39
doi:10.1186/s12984-015-0031-7
Published: 18 April 2015
Published: 18 April 2015
Abstract (provisional)
Background Previous studies have shown that a cerebrovascular accident disrupts the
coordinated control of leg muscles during locomotion inducing asymmetric gait patterns.
However, the ability of muscle synergies and spinal maps to reflect the redistribution
of the workload between legs after the trauma has not been investigated so far.
Methods
To investigate this issue, twelve post-stroke and ten healthy participants were asked
to walk on a treadmill at controlled speeds (0.5, 0.7, 0.9, 1.1 km/h), while the EMG
activity of twelve leg muscles was recorded on both legs. The synergies underlying
muscle activation and the estimated motoneuronal activity in the lumbosacral enlargement
(L2-S2) were computed and compared between groups.
Results Results showed that muscle
synergies in the unaffected limb were significantly more comparable to those of the
healthy control group than the ones in the affected side. Spinal maps were dissimilar
between the affected and unaffected sides highlighting a significant shift of the
foci of the activity toward the upper levels of the spinal cord in the unaffected
leg.
Conclusions Muscle synergies and spinal maps reflect the asymmetry as a motor
deficit after stroke. However, further investigations are required to support or reject
the hypothesis that the altered muscular organization highlighted by muscle synergies
and spinal maps may be due to the concomitant contribution of the altered information
coming from the upper part of the CNS, as resulting from the stroke, and to the abnormal
sensory feedback due to the neuromuscular adaptation of the patients.
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