Rapid limb-specific modulation of vestibular contributions to ankle muscle activity during locomotion.

The Japanese journal of physiology Pub Date : 2017-03-15 Epub Date: 2017-02-22 DOI:10.1113/JP272614
Patrick A Forbes, Mark Vlutters, Christopher J Dakin, Herman van der Kooij, Jean-Sébastien Blouin, Alfred C Schouten
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Abstract

Key points: The vestibular influence on human walking is phase-dependent and modulated across both limbs with changes in locomotor velocity and cadence. Using a split-belt treadmill, we show that vestibular influence on locomotor activity is modulated independently in each limb. The independent vestibular modulation of muscle activity from each limb occurs rapidly at the onset of split-belt walking, over a shorter time course relative to the characteristic split-belt error-correction mechanisms (i.e. muscle activity and kinematics) associated with locomotor adaptation. Together, the present results indicate that the nervous system rapidly modulates the vestibular influence of each limb separately through processes involving ongoing sensory feedback loops. These findings help us understand how vestibular information is used to accommodate the variable and commonplace demands of locomotion, such as turning or navigating irregular terrain.

Abstract: During walking, the vestibular influence on locomotor activity is phase-dependent and modulated in both limbs with changes in velocity. It is unclear, however, whether this bilateral modulation is due to a coordinated mechanism between both limbs or instead through limb-specific processes that remain masked by the symmetric nature of locomotion. Here, human subjects walked on a split-belt treadmill with one belt moving at 0.4 m s-1 and the other moving at 0.8 m s-1 while exposed to an electrical vestibular stimulus. Muscle activity was recorded bilaterally around the ankles of each limb and used to compare vestibulo-muscular coupling between velocity-matched and unmatched tied-belt walking. In general, response magnitudes decreased by ∼20-50% and occurred ∼13-20% earlier in the stride cycle at the higher belt velocity. This velocity-dependent modulation of vestibular-evoked muscle activity was retained during split-belt walking and was similar, within each limb, to velocity-matched tied-belt walking. These results demonstrate that the vestibular influence on ankle muscles during locomotion can be adapted independently to each limb. Furthermore, modulation of vestibular-evoked muscle responses occurred rapidly (∼13-34 strides) after onset of split-belt walking. This rapid adaptation contrasted with the prolonged adaptation in step length symmetry (∼128 strides) as well as EMG magnitude and timing (∼40-100 and ∼20-70 strides, respectively). These results suggest that vestibular influence on ankle muscle control is adjusted rapidly in sensorimotor control loops as opposed to longer-term error correction mechanisms commonly associated with split-belt adaptation. Rapid limb-specific sensorimotor feedback adaptation may be advantageous for asymmetric overground locomotion, such as navigating irregular terrain or turning.

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运动时前庭对踝关节肌肉活动的快速调节具有肢体特异性。
要点前庭对人类行走的影响是相位依赖的,并随着运动速度和步幅的变化而在双侧肢体上进行调节。通过使用分带跑步机,我们发现前庭对运动活动的影响在每个肢体中都是独立调节的。前庭对每个肢体肌肉活动的独立调节在分带行走开始时迅速发生,相对于与运动适应相关的分带误差校正机制(即肌肉活动和运动学)而言,时间过程更短。总之,本研究结果表明,神经系统通过涉及持续感觉反馈回路的过程,迅速分别调节每个肢体的前庭影响。这些发现有助于我们理解前庭信息是如何被用于适应运动中多变和常见的需求的,例如转弯或在不规则地形中导航。摘要:在行走过程中,前庭对运动活动的影响是相位依赖的,并随着速度的变化而在两肢中进行调节。然而,目前还不清楚这种双侧调节是由于双肢之间的协调机制,还是由于运动的对称性所掩盖的肢体特异性过程。在这里,人类受试者在分带跑步机上行走,其中一条带的运动速度为 0.4 m s-1,另一条带的运动速度为 0.8 m s-1,同时受到前庭电刺激。在每个肢体的脚踝周围记录双侧肌肉活动,用于比较速度匹配和非匹配绑带行走的前庭-肌肉耦合。一般来说,在较高的系带速度下,反应幅度减少了 20%至 50%,并且在步幅周期中提前了 13%至 20%。这种前庭诱发肌肉活动的速度依赖性调节在分带行走中得以保留,并且在每个肢体上与速度匹配的绑带行走相似。这些结果表明,在运动过程中,前庭对踝关节肌肉的影响可以独立地适应每个肢体。此外,前庭诱发的肌肉反应调节在分带行走开始后迅速发生(13-34步)。这种快速适应与步长对称性(∼128步)以及肌电图幅度和时间(分别为∼40-100步和∼20-70步)的长期适应形成鲜明对比。这些结果表明,前庭对踝关节肌肉控制的影响是在感觉运动控制环路中快速调整的,而不是通常与分带适应相关的长期纠错机制。快速的肢体特异性感觉运动反馈适应可能有利于非对称地面运动,如在不规则地形上导航或转弯。
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