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Neuromusculoskeletal Simulation Reveals Abnormal Rectus Femoris-Gluteus Medius Coupling in Post-stroke Gait
- Walker Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, United States
Introduction
Following a stroke, individuals often experience
significant impairments including muscle weakness, spasticity, increased
tone, and abnormal coordination (1), which often results in compensatory movements (2). Abnormal coordination has been quantified in the upper limb (3), but only more recently in the lower limbs using joint torque measures (4–7), mechanical perturbations (7, 8) and H-reflex stimulations (9–12).
However, it is unclear whether such abnormal coordination has direct
consequences on gait function. Descriptive gait analyses based on
biomechanical data and simulated muscle activations during gait in
post-stroke individuals (13–15) and gait in cerebral palsy (16, 17)
suggest that lack of lower limb coordination is related to gait
dysfunction. Yet descriptive analysis lacks the ability to identify the
mechanisms of abnormal coordination that perturbation methods can
provide.
Our previous work developed a device that delivers controlled knee flexion torque perturbations during gait (18) and applied it to individuals post-stroke with Stiff-Knee Gait (SKG) (19). SKG is defined by reduced knee flexion during the swing phase, often assumed to be compensated for with hip circumduction (2).
However, when exposed to pre-swing knee flexion torque perturbations,
those with SKG walked with exaggerated hip abduction during swing
instead of the expected reduction, while there was no change in healthy
controls (19).
Biomechanical factors such as balance and perturbation dynamics could
not account for the increased abduction. These results suggested that
hip abduction may not be solely acting as a compensatory motion for
reduced knee flexion. We examined this possibility further by
restricting knee flexion in healthy individuals with a knee brace (20).
We observed that hip hiking, not abduction, compensated for reduced
knee flexion, despite persistently high hip abduction in those with
post-stroke SKG. Thus, abnormal neural behavior appears to underlie the
hip abduction in people with SKG. However, the neural mechanisms leading
to the exaggerated hip abduction remain unclear. The abnormal
cross-planar kinematics were likely the result of abnormal heteronymous
muscular activation initiated via reflexive (8) or voluntary (4, 21)
mechanisms. For instance, cross-planar reflexive couplings between
adductor longus (AL) and RF were observed in individuals post-stroke
while in a seated position (8).
Also in post-stroke individuals, voluntary activation of the hamstrings
resulted in a cross-planar coupling with adductors while standing (4).
This is in agreement with previous simulation analyses of post-stroke
gait showing synergetic coupling between hip abductors and knee flexors
in the swing phase (22).
Based on this information, the exaggerated abduction observed in our
previous work may have been the result of a reflexive stimulus of the RF
coupled with abductor muscles (Hypothesis 1). In contrast, such
abductor activity may have been coupled with voluntary initiation of the
hamstrings (Hypothesis 2) as an adaptation to the perturbations.
In this work, we seek to delineate the underlying muscle
activation behind the abnormal cross-planar kinematics. We used
neuromusculoskeletal modeling and simulation (NMMS) to derive the
estimated muscle states and supplement measured EMG. NMMS combines the
use of a lower limb musculoskeletal model with measured kinematic and
kinetic data to estimate muscle states (23, 24). Descriptive NMMS simulations have identified the role of rectus femoris in post-stroke gait (25).
Here we used NMMS to estimate muscle states that are difficult to
measure experimentally during gait, such as fiber stretch velocity and
all lower limb muscle activities, including abductor muscles that are
difficult to access using EMG. The accuracy of the simulated fiber
stretch measures were obtained from Hill-type muscle models verified by
muscle moment-arms of cadaver subjects (26–28). Simulated fiber length and velocity has been used for generating tunable models for contracture and spasticity assessments (29) and determining operating range of fibers during walking with different speeds (30, 31).
Thus, together with measured EMG, NMMS can help elucidate mechanisms of
cross-planar muscle synergies and abnormal reflexive responses.
Evidence of an abnormal reflex coupling underlying excessive hip
abduction during knee flexion perturbations in those with SKG would
manifest itself as a hyperactive RF stretch reflex followed by
heteronymous activation in the hip abductors (H1). Alternatively, if the
abnormal coupling was generated by the voluntary knee flexion movement
and due to lack of independent joint control, temporary removal of
torque perturbations (“catch trials”) should result in correlated
activation between the hamstrings and abductors (H2). This study
represents a novel approach toward delineating the differential roles of
impairments in post-stroke gait.
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