Rocking in a rocking chair activates trunk muscles in children with spinal cord injury and impaired trunk control.

IF 1 Q4 PEDIATRICS Journal of pediatric rehabilitation medicine Pub Date : 2025-02-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-26 DOI:10.1177/18758894251319126
Johnathan J George, Andrea L Behrman, Beatrice Ugiliweneza, Grant Morgan, Thomas J Roussel
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Abstract

PurposeRocking in a rocking chair may facilitate trunk muscle activation in children with spinal cord injury (SCI). To assess this, children with SCI and typically developing (TD) children were evaluated for increases in trunk muscle activation, muscle activation patterns, and correlation of trunk muscle activation with trunk control during rocking.MethodsEleven children with SCI and 10 TD children aged 1-12 years rocked while surface electromyography activity in arm, leg, and trunk muscles was captured. Mean muscle activity during rocking and at baseline were compared for each muscle. Temporal activation patterns of SCI and TD groups were compared using cluster analysis. Correlation of trunk control and trunk muscle activation was assessed.ResultsSignificantly higher muscle activity was found during rocking versus quiet sitting for each muscle (p < 0.05). Cluster analysis of temporal muscle activation patterns revealed two disparate SCI groups; one SCI group's muscle activation timing was similar to the TD group. Correlation analysis indicated greater trunk muscle activation in lower trunk muscles for participants with better trunk control.ConclusionRocking activates the neuromuscular system and is feasible for children with trunk impairment due to SCI, suggesting its potential as a home-based activity for extending practice beyond the clinic.

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在摇椅上摇动可以激活脊髓损伤和躯干控制受损儿童的躯干肌肉。
目的:儿童脊髓损伤后,坐在摇椅上可能会促进躯干肌肉的激活。为了评估这一点,我们评估了脊髓损伤儿童和典型发育(TD)儿童在摇晃过程中躯干肌肉激活的增加、肌肉激活模式以及躯干肌肉激活与躯干控制的相关性。方法10例1 ~ 12岁的脊髓损伤儿童和10例脊髓损伤儿童在摇晃的同时,捕捉手臂、腿部和躯干肌肉的表面肌电活动。在摇摆和基线时,每块肌肉的平均肌肉活动进行比较。采用聚类分析比较脊髓损伤组和TD组的时间激活模式。评估躯干控制与躯干肌肉激活的相关性。结果:与安静坐着相比,摇晃时肌肉活动明显更高
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
5.30%
发文量
139
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