Cortical drive may facilitate enhanced use of the paretic leg induced by random constraint force to the non-paretic leg during walking in chronic stroke.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q4 NEUROSCIENCES Experimental Brain Research Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2024-10-12 DOI:10.1007/s00221-024-06932-6
Hyosok Lim, Shijun Yan, Weena Dee, Renee Keefer, Iram Hameeduddin, Elliot J Roth, William Z Rymer, Ming Wu
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Abstract

The goal of this study was to determine the effects of applying random vs. constant constraint force to the non-paretic leg during walking on enhanced use of the paretic leg in individuals post-stroke, and examine the underlying brain mechanisms. Twelve individuals with chronic stroke were tested under two conditions while walking on a treadmill: random vs. constant magnitude of constraint force applied to the non-paretic leg during swing phase of gait using a custom designed robotic system. Leg kinematics, muscle activity of the paretic leg, and electroencephalography (EEG) were recorded during treadmill walking. Paretic step length and muscle activity of the paretic ankle plantarflexors significantly increased after walking with random and constant constraint forces. Cortico-cortical connectivity between motor cortices and cortico-muscular connectivity from the lesioned motor cortex to the paretic ankle plantarflexors significantly increased for the random force condition but not for the constant force condition. In addition, individuals post-stroke with greater baseline gait variability showed greater improvements in the paretic step length after walking with random force condition but not with the constant force condition. In conclusion, application of random constraint force to the non-paretic leg may enhance the use of the paretic leg during walking by facilitating cortical drive from the lesioned motor cortex to the paretic ankle plantarflexors. Results from this study may be used for the development of constraint induced locomotor intervention approaches aimed at improving locomotor function in individuals after stroke.

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在慢性中风患者行走过程中,非瘫痪腿受到随机约束力的影响,皮层驱动力可能会促进瘫痪腿的使用。
本研究的目的是确定在行走过程中对非瘫痪腿施加随机与恒定约束力对提高中风后患者瘫痪腿使用能力的影响,并研究其潜在的大脑机制。12 名慢性中风患者在跑步机上行走时接受了两种条件下的测试:在步态摆动阶段使用定制设计的机器人系统对非瘫痪腿施加随机与恒定大小的约束力。在跑步机上行走时,对腿部运动学、瘫痪腿的肌肉活动和脑电图(EEG)进行了记录。在随机和恒定约束力下行走后,瘫痪腿的步长和瘫痪踝关节跖屈肌的肌肉活动明显增加。在随机力条件下,运动皮层之间的皮层-皮层连通性以及从病变运动皮层到瘫痪踝关节跖屈肌的皮层-肌肉连通性明显增加,而在恒定力条件下则没有增加。此外,基线步态变异较大的中风后患者在随机力条件下行走后,其瘫痪步长有较大改善,而恒定力条件下则没有。总之,在非瘫痪腿上施加随机约束力可能会促进大脑皮层从病变运动皮层向瘫痪踝关节跖屈肌的驱动,从而提高瘫痪腿在行走过程中的使用率。这项研究的结果可用于开发约束诱导运动干预方法,以改善中风后患者的运动功能。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
5.00%
发文量
228
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Founded in 1966, Experimental Brain Research publishes original contributions on many aspects of experimental research of the central and peripheral nervous system. The focus is on molecular, physiology, behavior, neurochemistry, developmental, cellular and molecular neurobiology, and experimental pathology relevant to general problems of cerebral function. The journal publishes original papers, reviews, and mini-reviews.
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