运动过渡期间协调平衡和运动的预期肌肉激活:一个叙述性的回顾

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q3 NEUROSCIENCES Gait & posture Pub Date : 2025-05-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-11 DOI:10.1016/j.gaitpost.2025.02.009
Romain Bechet , Romain Tisserand , Laetitia Fradet , Floren Colloud
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引用次数: 0

摘要

运动时保持平衡对日常活动至关重要。理解人体运动的一个关键挑战是确定肌肉如何促进平衡-运动协调。运动过渡,定义为在两种稳定平衡状态之间进行的运动,是研究平衡-运动协调的特别有趣的阶段,因为全身动量的大而离散的变化可能会扰乱平衡。在自主发起的运动转换过程中,预期肌肉模式提供了有利于保持平衡和执行运动的生物力学条件。研究问题:在自主发起的运动转换过程中,预期肌肉激活对平衡运动协调的机械后果是什么?方法通过三种平衡机制(“移动压力中心(CoP)”、“反向旋转节段”和“施加新的外力”)的棱镜,回顾了文献中发现的四种自主发起的运动转变中预期肌肉激活的生物力学贡献。特别是,我们研究预期肌肉激活如何调节全身重心加速度。我们表明,预期肌肉激活的机械后果已经被广泛描述,但主要使用“移动CoP”机制。与它们在稳定平衡状态下的作用不同,在电机过渡的预期阶段,“移动CoP”和“施加新的外力”机制都会产生所需的机械不稳定性。“反向旋转”机制可能在电机转换过程中起到稳定器的作用,但需要进一步的研究来澄清这一假设。这篇综述表明,与稳定平衡状态相比,在运动过渡的预期阶段,肌肉激活过程对平衡-运动协调有不同的机械后果。由于由此产生的机械不稳定性可能导致跌倒,因此需要更好地了解运动转换的机制,以便为平衡缺陷人群设计更有效的跌倒预防方案和/或设备。
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Anticipatory muscle activations to coordinate balance and movement during motor transitions: A narrative review

Background

Maintaining balance while moving is vital for day-to-day activities. A key challenge in the comprehension of human movement is to determine how muscles contribute to balance-movement coordination. Motor transitions, defined as movements executed between two steady balance states, are particularly interesting phases to study balance-movement coordination because a large, discrete change in whole-body momentum may disturb balance. During voluntarily-initiated motor transitions, anticipatory muscle patterns provide the biomechanical conditions that are favourable to both maintaining balance and executing the movement.

Research question

What are the mechanical consequences of anticipatory muscle activations for balance-movement coordination during voluntarily-initiated motor transitions?

Methods

We review the biomechanical contributions of the anticipatory muscle activations identified in the literature during four types of voluntarily-initiated motor transitions, through the prism of three balance mechanisms (‘moving the centre of pressure (CoP)’, ‘counter-rotating segments’, and ‘applying new external force(s)’). In particular, we investigate how anticipatory muscle activations modulate whole-body centre of mass acceleration.

Results

We show that the mechanical consequences of anticipatory muscle activations have been extensively described, but mainly using the ‘moving the CoP’ mechanism. Unlike their role during steady balance states, both ‘moving the CoP’ and ‘applying new external force(s)’ mechanisms create a required mechanical instability during the anticipatory phase of motor transitions. The ‘counter-rotating’ mechanism may act as a stabiliser during motor transitions, but additional research is needed to clarify this assumption.

Significance

This review establishes that muscle activation processes have different mechanical consequences for balance-movement coordination during the anticipatory phases of motor transitions, compared to steady balance states. Because the mechanical instability that is created can lead to falls, a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying motor transitions is needed to enable the design of more effective fall prevention programs and/or devices for population with balance deficits.
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来源期刊
Gait & posture
Gait & posture 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
12.50%
发文量
616
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Gait & Posture is a vehicle for the publication of up-to-date basic and clinical research on all aspects of locomotion and balance. The topics covered include: Techniques for the measurement of gait and posture, and the standardization of results presentation; Studies of normal and pathological gait; Treatment of gait and postural abnormalities; Biomechanical and theoretical approaches to gait and posture; Mathematical models of joint and muscle mechanics; Neurological and musculoskeletal function in gait and posture; The evolution of upright posture and bipedal locomotion; Adaptations of carrying loads, walking on uneven surfaces, climbing stairs etc; spinal biomechanics only if they are directly related to gait and/or posture and are of general interest to our readers; The effect of aging and development on gait and posture; Psychological and cultural aspects of gait; Patient education.
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