Motor modules are largely unaffected by pathological walking biomechanics: a simulation study.

IF 5.2 2区 医学 Q1 ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation Pub Date : 2025-01-30 DOI:10.1186/s12984-025-01561-8
Mohammad Rahimi Goloujeh, Jessica L Allen
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Abstract

Background: Motor module (a.k.a. muscle synergy) analysis has frequently been used to provide insight into changes in muscle coordination associated with declines in walking performance, to evaluate the effect of different rehabilitation interventions, and more recently, to control exoskeletons and prosthetic devices. However, it remains unclear whether changes in muscle coordination revealed via motor module analysis stem from abnormal walking biomechanics or neural control. This distinction has important implications for the use of motor module analysis for rehabilitation interventions and device design. Thus, this study aims to elucidate the extent to which motor modules emerge from pathological walking biomechanics, i.e. abnormal walking biomechanics commonly observed in individuals with neurological disease and/or injury.

Methods: We conducted a series of computer simulations using OpenSim Moco to simulate pathological walking biomechanics by manipulating speed, asymmetry, and step width in a three-dimensional musculoskeletal model. We focused on these spatiotemporal metrics because they are commonly altered in individuals with Parkinson's disease, stroke survivors, etc. and have been associated with changes in motor module number and structure. We extracted motor modules using nonnegative matrix factorization from the muscle activations from each simulation. We then examined how alterations in walking biomechanics influenced the number and structure of extracted motor modules and compared the findings to previous experimental studies.

Results: The motor modules identified from our simulations were similar to those identified from previously published experiments of non-pathological walking. Moreover, our findings indicate that the same motor modules can be used to generate a range of pathological-like waking biomechanics by modulating their recruitment over the gait cycle. These results contrast with experimental studies in which pathological-like walking biomechanics are accompanied by a reduction in motor module number and alterations in their structure.

Conclusions: This study highlights that pathological walking biomechanics do not necessarily require abnormal motor modules. In other words, changes in number and structure of motor modules can be a valuable indicator of alterations in neuromuscular control and may therefore be useful for guiding rehabilitation interventions and controlling exoskeletons and prosthetic devices in individuals with impaired walking function due to neurological disease or injury.

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运动模块在很大程度上不受病理步行生物力学的影响:一项模拟研究。
背景:运动模块(又称肌肉协同作用)分析经常被用于研究与行走能力下降相关的肌肉协调变化,评估不同康复干预措施的效果,以及最近用于控制外骨骼和假体装置。然而,尚不清楚通过运动模块分析揭示的肌肉协调变化是否源于异常的行走生物力学或神经控制。这种区别对于使用运动模块分析进行康复干预和设备设计具有重要意义。因此,本研究旨在阐明运动模块在多大程度上来自病理性行走生物力学,即在患有神经疾病和/或损伤的个体中常见的异常行走生物力学。方法:采用OpenSim Moco软件进行一系列计算机模拟,通过对三维肌肉骨骼模型的速度、不对称性和步宽进行控制,模拟病理步行生物力学。我们之所以关注这些时空指标,是因为它们通常在帕金森病患者、中风幸存者等个体中发生改变,并且与运动模块数量和结构的变化有关。我们从每个模拟的肌肉激活中使用非负矩阵分解提取运动模块。然后,我们研究了行走生物力学的变化如何影响提取的运动模块的数量和结构,并将研究结果与之前的实验研究进行了比较。结果:从我们的模拟中确定的运动模块与先前发表的非病理性步行实验中确定的运动模块相似。此外,我们的研究结果表明,相同的运动模块可以通过调节其在步态周期中的招募来产生一系列类似病理的清醒生物力学。这些结果与实验研究相反,在实验研究中,病理样步行生物力学伴随着运动模块数量的减少和结构的改变。结论:本研究强调病理性步行生物力学并不一定需要异常的运动模块。换句话说,运动模块数量和结构的变化可能是神经肌肉控制改变的一个有价值的指标,因此可能有助于指导康复干预和控制因神经疾病或损伤而导致行走功能受损的个体的外骨骼和假体装置。
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来源期刊
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 工程技术-工程:生物医学
CiteScore
9.60
自引率
3.90%
发文量
122
审稿时长
24 months
期刊介绍: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation considers manuscripts on all aspects of research that result from cross-fertilization of the fields of neuroscience, biomedical engineering, and physical medicine & rehabilitation.
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