Changing stroke rehab and research worldwide now.Time is Brain! trillions and trillions of neurons that DIE each day because there are NO effective hyperacute therapies besides tPA(only 12% effective). I have 523 posts on hyperacute therapy, enough for researchers to spend decades proving them out. These are my personal ideas and blog on stroke rehabilitation and stroke research. Do not attempt any of these without checking with your medical provider. Unless you join me in agitating, when you need these therapies they won't be there.

What this blog is for:

My blog is not to help survivors recover, it is to have the 10 million yearly stroke survivors light fires underneath their doctors, stroke hospitals and stroke researchers to get stroke solved. 100% recovery. The stroke medical world is completely failing at that goal, they don't even have it as a goal. Shortly after getting out of the hospital and getting NO information on the process or protocols of stroke rehabilitation and recovery I started searching on the internet and found that no other survivor received useful information. This is an attempt to cover all stroke rehabilitation information that should be readily available to survivors so they can talk with informed knowledge to their medical staff. It lays out what needs to be done to get stroke survivors closer to 100% recovery. It's quite disgusting that this information is not available from every stroke association and doctors group.

Saturday, October 26, 2024

Dynamical network-based evaluation for neuromuscular dysfunction in stroke-induced hemiplegia during standing

 Ask your competent? doctor if this objective damage diagnosis is the start to mapping EXACT rehab protocols to fixing such damage.

Dynamical network-based evaluation for neuromuscular dysfunction in stroke-induced hemiplegia during standing

Abstract

Background

A given movement requires precise coordination of multiple muscles under the control of center nervous system. However, detailed knowledge about the changing characteristics of neuromuscular control for multi-muscle coordination in post-stroke hemiplegic patients during standing is still lacking. This study aimed to investigate the hemiplegia-linked neuromuscular dysfunction during standing from the perspective of multi-muscle dynamical coordination by utilizing a novel network approach – weighted recurrence network (WRN).

Methods

Ten male hemiplegic patients with first-ever stroke and 10 age-matched healthy male adults were instructed to stand on a platform quietly for 30 s with eyes opened and eyes closed, respectively. The WRN was constructed based on the surface electromyography signals of 16 muscles from trunk, hips, thighs and calves. Relevant topological parameters, including clustering coefficient (C) and average shortest path length (L), were extracted to evaluate the dynamical coordination of multiple muscles. A measure of node centrality in network theory, degree of centrality (DC), was innovatively introduced to assess the contribution of single muscle in the multi-muscle dynamical coordination. The standing-related assessment metric, center of pressure (COP), was provided by the platform directly.

Results

Results showed that the post-stroke hemiplegic patients stood with remarkably higher similarity of muscle activation and more coupled intermuscular dynamics, characterized by higher C and lower L than the healthy subjects (p < 0.05). The DC values and rankings of back, hip and calf muscles on the affected side were significantly decreased, whereas those on the unaffected side were significantly increased in hemiplegia group compared with the healthy group (p < 0.05). Without visual feedback, subjects exhibited enhanced muscle coordination and increased muscle involvement (p < 0.05). A decrease in C and an increase in L of WRN were observed with decreased COP areas (p < 0.05).

Conclusions

These findings revealed that stroke-induced hemiplegia could significantly influence the neuromuscular control, which was manifested as more coupled intermuscular dynamics, abnormal deactivation of muscles on affected side and compensation of muscles on unaffected side from the perspective of multi-muscle coordination. Enhanced multi-muscle dynamical coordination was strongly associated with impaired postural control. This study provides a novel analytical tool for evaluation of neuromuscular dysfunction and specification of responsible muscles for impaired postural control in stroke-induced hemiplegic patients, and could be potentially applied in clinical practice.

Introduction

Postural control is a primary request of standing balance maintenance and is vulnerable to stroke. Post-stroke patients usually exhibit increased body sway, weight-bearing asymmetry, decreased limits of stability, body tilting and even falls [1,2,3]. The motor system, involving muscles, bones and joints, can generate a corrective, stabilizing torque to maintain the postural stability and orientation within the base of support [4]. To understand the mechanisms underlying postural control would help develop more indicators of motor functions relevant to impaired standing balance control and improve the efficiency of standing recovery after a stroke.

Postural control requires temporal and spatial coordination of multiple muscles. However, the damage to the pyramidal system and (or) extrapyramidal system in stroke survivors leads to interruption of descending motor paths and decreased common motoneuronal drives, ultimately manifesting as altered multi-muscle coordination [5, 6]. As one of the main motor behaviors for postural control, muscle synergies during walking has been studied in some depth. Asymmetric gait occurs after a stroke, as evidenced by differences in muscle synergies between sides. Compared with the affected side, muscle synergies related to unaffected side of hemiplegic patients were more similar to those of healthy individuals [7]. Besides, muscle synergies may merge after a stroke. It has been verified that fewer muscle synergies were needed to account for the whole muscle activity on the affected side when compared to the unaffected side [8], and rehabilitation training could significantly increase the number of muscle synergies during walking [9]. Upright standing can be approximated to a single inverted pendulum, with high demand on the coordination of muscles on trunk, hips, thighs and calves to counter gravity [10]. Surface electromyography (sEMG) studies in the standing position of post-stroke patients mainly focused on single-muscle activation and two-muscle coupling. Specifically, post-stroke patients have lower muscle activation and greater synchronous control between the antagonistic muscles on the affected lower limb [11, 12]. Stroke-related characteristics in muscle coordination during standing has been relatively less studied. Most of the research on muscle synergies during standing in post-stroke patients are generally combined with other tasks, such as reaching from standing, sit-to-stand transition and standing under disturbance [13,14,15]. The multi-muscle coordination of hemiplegic patients performing simple standing task is in urgent need of study.

Quantification of multi-muscle coordination relies on appropriate analytical tools. Previous studies about multi-muscle coordination are mostly based on non-negative matrix factorization (NMF), principal component analysis (PCA) and spectral coherence [6, 16, 17]. Tasks that are better analyzed by NMF and PCA are dynamic tasks, such as walking, running, pedaling and standing under perturbation [15, 18, 19]. These tasks satisfy the requirement of variation in activation amplitude for NMF and PCA to correctly identify synergy vectors of muscles [20,21,22]. When processing relatively steady sEMG signals, the role of NMF and PCA are very limited [23]. Besides, NMF and PCA are sensitive to the data length and signal quality of sEMG, thereby showing low robustness and repeatability in experimental studies [24]. Linear spectral coherence analysis assumes that a variety of muscles are coupled by linear relation, omitting the synchronizations between muscle complex. Therefore, some nonlinear analytical tools that are not based solely on signal amplitude and frequency variability, such as recurrence-based analysis, were proposed to assess the dynamical coordination of nonlinear, nonstationary neurophysiological signals [25, 26]. Recurrence-based analysis methods showed unique advantages in detection of the state changes in drifting dynamical motor systems and measurement of the rule-obeying structures in motor commands, especially for movements with little variation in sEMG signal amplitude [25,26,27]. By a careful choice of the setup parameters, recurrence-based analysis methods are relatively immune to noise [26]. However, these recurrence-based analysis methods had difficulty in describing detailed changes in specific muscles. In the examination of postural control during standing, there is a need to develop novel methods that can provide holistic and detailed information on intermuscular coordination.

Network analysis has its origins in graph theory and describes the spatiotemporal relationships between system elements through holistic and detailed characteristics, enabling in-depth exploration of the structure, behavior and function of systems [28, 29]. In the analysis of human electrophysiological signals, network analysis has been widely used to characterize the organization of distributed brain activity [30]. In the last decade, muscle networks have been gaining attention and have provided powerful tools for monitoring the spatiotemporal synergetic relationships of multiple muscles [31,32,33,34,35]. Most of existing literature decodes functional muscle connectivity by linear spectral coherence and NMF [31, 33, 34, 36]. Recently, a novel multiplex recurrence network (MRN) approach has be proposed by combining dynamical recurrence with a multiplex network [37]. The MRN is suitable for the analysis of neurophysiological dynamics. It maps multivariate time series into phase space simultaneously to obtain trajectories and reveals the interactions of multiple subsystems through subtle recurrence features between trajectories, providing a new way to identify the structural and temporal characteristics of intermuscular dynamical coordination [25, 38]. In one of our previous studies, we employed the MRN to assess the intermuscular coordination for both grip and pinch at different force levels, and found that MRN could better explore the tiny changes of muscle coordination within a short time muscle contraction (less than 500 ms) compared with the NMF and PCA [39]. An intriguing issue is whether the MRN could provide insights into the intermuscular coordination of multiple muscles responsible for postural control and promote the evaluation of balance capacity for post-stroke patients.

Strongly shaped by the anatomical constraints of the musculoskeletal system and affected by tasks, the muscles of the functional network usually show unbalanced contributions [33]. Identifying the responsible muscles for abnormal coordinated actions may aid in developing more effective treatment programs of rehabilitation for patients with stroke. Using metrics that could measure the importance of nodes in the network, such as the degree of centrality (DC), the specific contributions of nodes in a network would be quantified and the abnormal function of nodes could be identified [40]. Unfortunately, little is known whether the contributions of multiple muscles involved in postural control during standing could be indexed, or the stroke-related impaired muscles could be identified.

The aim of this study was to evaluate the multi-muscle coordination for postural control during standing and to identify the abnormal muscle functions due to stroke. A weighted recurrence network (WRN) was constructed to analyze the dynamical coordination of multiple muscles responsible for standing balance. The DC was implemented to index the contributions of specific muscles in WRN. It was hypothesized that stroke would affect the dynamical coordination patterns for postural control, and it was also hypothesized that responsible muscles for impaired coordination after a stroke could be identified by using this novel method.

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