Will this help your doctor prevent your ankle from rolling? And where does spasticity fit in?
http://lowerextremityreview.com/article/the-brain-a-new-frontier-in-ankle-instability-research
Among the physically active, no musculoskeletal pathology is more
prevalent than lateral ankle sprain. Recent investigations estimate 60%
of the general population has experienced an ankle sprain.1
Several risk factors for ankle sprain have been identified, such as
impaired strength or balance, but the single greatest risk factor for a
lateral ankle sprain is a history of a previous lateral ankle sprain.2
It is estimated that 50% of patients who suffer an ankle sprain
subsequently experience frequent sensations of rolling in the ankle,
termed functional ankle instability (FAI). This pathology is often
compared with similar joint instabilities at the knee3 and shoulder4 that have demonstrated a complex etiology, with causes spanning from morphologic changes to neuroplasticity in the cortex.
Although several possible mechanisms for FAI have been proposed, its
etiology remains ambiguous. These theories are often complicated by
their approach to mechanical laxity in the joint. Original reports of
FAI described patients with normal amounts of joint laxity, suggesting
the ligaments surrounding the joint may have healed. However, these
patients demonstrated deficits in balance, leading the investigators to
conclude that “peripheral deafferentation” contributes to this
pathology.5 This implies that, while normal stiffness may be
restored to the ligament as it heals, the mechanoreceptors within the
torn ligament remain impaired or are replaced with receptors of a
different type (i.e., free nerve endings). It was hypothesized that loss
of this afferent (sensory) feedback would affect the joint’s
proprioception—its sense of position, movement, and force—which would
delay the sensation of ankle rolling and subsequent reflexive responses.6
Since these initial paradigms were proposed, extensive research has
investigated proprioceptive deficits among populations of patients with
unstable ankles, finding an inconsistent relationship between
proprioception and joint instability.5 Similarly, further
measurements of mechanical laxity in this population, originally taken
using stress radiography, and more recently through the advent of ankle
arthrometry, suggest mechanical laxity does exist in functionally
unstable ankles, contributing to the confusion about the etiology of
this pathology.7
One important limitation to understanding the cause of this condition
is the operational definition of proprioception used in research.
Proprioception describes the afferent information that determines joint
position sense, kinesthesia, and force sense arising from
capsuloligamentous and musculotendinous mechanoreceptors. However,
proprioception is often quantified by testing an individual’s ability to
recognize a joint angle, identify when the joint is moving, replicate a
given amount of force, or maintain balance.8 These indirect
measures, much like an episode of giving way at the joint, require
sensation at the joint, the modulation of a reflex at the spinal cord,
integration in the somatosensory cortex, and a motor response initiated
in the cortex and superimposed on spinal reflexes. These tests therefore
do not account for each level of the nervous system, but rather an
isolated motor response incorporating spinal and supraspinal influences.
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