Publications by authors named "Rymer W"

Spinal cord injury (SCI) often results in severe motor and sensory deficits, leading to significant disability. Preclinical studies and retrospective studies suggest that a critical window of enhanced neuroplasticity may exist immediately after SCI, during which therapeutic interventions could yield greater functional improvements. The impact of time interval since SCI on efficacy of rehabilitation has not been directly assessed and is the focus of this clinical trial.

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The purpose of this study was to determine whether the intermittent adaptation to pelvis perturbation load enhances retention of improved weight transfer and generalization of motor skills from treadmill to overground walking, compared with effects of the continuous adaptation. Fifteen individuals with incomplete SCI participated in two experimental sessions. Each session consisted of (1) perturbed treadmill walking with either intermittent (i.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to compare the effects of random and constant constraint forces on the non-paretic leg during walking and their impact on the paretic leg in post-stroke individuals.
  • Twelve chronic stroke patients were tested on a treadmill while their leg movements, muscle activity, and brain activity were recorded under both force conditions.
  • Results showed that random constraint forces improved step length and muscle activity in the paretic leg more effectively than constant forces, suggesting that this approach may enhance motor recovery and inform future rehab strategies.
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Reduced propulsion of the paretic leg contributes to impaired walking in people poststroke. The goal of this study was to determine whether phasic electrical stimulation to the paretic gastrocnemius muscle combined with resistance applied to the nonparetic leg during swing phase while walking would enhance muscle activation of the paretic gastrocnemius and propulsive force of the paretic leg. Fifteen individuals who had a stroke visited the lab once to complete two experimental sessions (i.

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Motor interference, where new skill acquisition disrupts the performance of a previously learned skill, is a critical yet underexplored factor in gait rehabilitation post-stroke. This study investigates the interference effects of two different practice schedules, applying interleaved (ABA condition) and intermittent (A-A condition) pulling force to the pelvis during treadmill walking, on lateral pelvis shifting towards the paretic leg in individuals with stroke. Task A involved applying resistive pelvis force (pulling towards the non-paretic side), and Task B applied assistive force (pulling towards the paretic side) at the stance phase of the paretic leg during walking.

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Purpose: To determine whether the application of continuous lateral trunk support forces during walking would improve trunk postural control and improve gait performance in children with CP.

Materials And Methods: Nineteen children with spastic CP participated in this study (8 boys; mean age 10.6 ± 3.

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Acute intermittent hypoxia (AIH) is an emerging technique for enhancing neuroplasticity and motor function in respiratory and limb musculature. Thus far, AIH-induced improvements in strength have been reported for upper and lower limb muscles after chronic incomplete cervical spinal cord injury (iSCI), but the underlying mechanisms have been elusive. We used high-density surface EMG (HDsEMG) to determine if motor unit discharge behaviour is altered after 15 × 60 s exposures to 9% inspired oxygen, interspersed with 21% inspired oxygen (AIH), compared to breathing only 21% air (SHAM).

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Objectives: To evaluate if acute intermittent hypoxia (AIH) coupled with transcutaneous spinal cord stimulation (tSCS) enhances task-specific training and leads to superior and more sustained gait improvements as compared with each of these strategies used in isolation in persons with chronic, incomplete spinal cord injury.

Design: Proof of concept, randomized crossover trial.

Setting: Outpatient, rehabilitation hospital.

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Despite recent studies indicating a significant correlation between somatosensory deficits and rehabilitation outcomes, how prevailing somatosensory deficits affect stroke survivors' ability to correct their movements and recover overall remains unclear. To explore how major deficits in somatosensory systems impede stroke survivors' motor correction to various external loads, we conducted a study with 13 chronic stroke survivors who had hemiparesis. An inertial, elastic, or viscous load, which was designed to impose perturbing forces with various force profiles, was introduced unexpectedly during the reaching task using a programmable haptic robot.

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Unlabelled: Brief episodes of low oxygen breathing (therapeutic acute intermittent hypoxia; tAIH) may serve as an effective plasticity-promoting primer to enhance the effects of transcutaneous spinal stimulation-enhanced walking therapy (WALK) in persons with chronic (>1 year) spinal cord injury (SCI). Pre-clinical studies in rodents with SCI show that tAIH and WALK therapies harness complementary mechanisms of plasticity to maximize walking recovery. Here, we present a multi-site clinical trial protocol designed to examine the influence of tAIH + WALK on walking recovery in persons with chronic SCI.

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The purpose of this study was to examine kinematic and neuromuscular responses of the head and body to pelvis perturbations with different intensities and frequencies during sitting astride in children with CP. Sixteen children with spastic CP (mean age 7.4 ± 2.

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Acute intermittent hypoxia (AIH) is an emerging technique for facilitating neural plasticity in individuals with chronic incomplete spinal cord injury (iSCI). A single sequence of AIH enhances hand grip strength and ankle plantarflexion torque, but underlying mechanisms are not yet clear. We sought to examine how AIH-induced changes in magnitude and spatial distribution of the electromyogram (EMG) of the biceps and triceps brachii contributes to improved strength.

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Targeting enhancing the use of the paretic leg during locomotor practice might improve motor function of the paretic leg. The purpose of this study was to determine whether application of constraint force to the nonparetic leg in the posterior direction during overground walking would enhance the use of the paretic leg in people with chronic stroke. Fifteen individuals after stroke participated in two experimental conditions, i.

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Background: The Graded Redefined Assessment of Strength, Sensation, and Prehension (GRASSP V1.0) was developed in 2010 as a 3-domain assessment for upper extremity function after tetraplegia (domains: Strength, Sensibility, and Prehension). A remote version (rGRASSP) was created in response to the growing needs of the field of Telemedicine.

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The purpose of this study was to investigate the influence of changes in muscle length on the torque fluctuations and on related oscillations in muscle activity during voluntary isometric contractions of ankle plantar flexor muscles. Eleven healthy individuals were asked to perform voluntary isometric contractions of ankle muscles at five different contraction intensities from 10% to 70% of maximum voluntary isometric contraction (MVIC) and at three different muscle lengths, implemented by changing the ankle joint angle (plantar flexion of 26°-shorter muscle length; plantar flexion of 10°-neutral muscle length; dorsiflexion of 3°-longer muscle length). Surface electromyogram (EMG) signals were recorded from the skin surface over the triceps surae muscles, and rectified-and-smoothed EMG (rsEMG) were estimated to assess the oscillations in muscle activity.

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Objective: The aim of this study is to determine the effects of bilateral trunk support during walking on trunk and leg kinematics and neuromuscular responses in children with cerebral palsy.

Design: Fourteen children with spastic cerebral palsy (Gross Motor Function Classification System level I to III) participated in this study. Children walked on a treadmill under four different conditions, that is, without support (Baseline), with bilateral support applied to the upper trunk (upper trunk support), the lower trunk (lower trunk support), and combined upper and lower trunk (combined trunk support).

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Purpose: The goal of this study was to determine whether enhanced phasic sensory afferent input paired with the application of controlled constraint force during walking would improve weight shift toward the paretic side and enhance use of the paretic leg.

Methods: Fourteen stroke survivors participated in two experimental conditions, sessions that consisted of 1 min treadmill walking without force and stimulation (baseline), 7 min walking with either "constraint force and sensory stimulation (constraint+stim)" or "constraint force only (constraint)" (adaptation), and then 2 min walking without force and stimulation (post-adaptation). Kinematics of the pelvis and legs, and muscle activity of the paretic leg were recorded.

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The purpose of this study was to determine whether the control of lateral balance can be improved by applying repeated lateral perturbation force to the pelvis during swing versus stance phase walking in individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI). Fourteen individuals with incomplete SCI were recruited in this study. Each participant visited the lab once and was tested in two experimental sessions that consisted of (1) treadmill walking with bilateral perturbation force applied to the pelvis in the lateral direction during either swing or stance phase of each leg and (2) overground walking pre- and post-treadmill walking.

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Background: It is not clear which neuromuscular factors are most closely associated with the loss of variable fascicle gearing after chronic stroke. The purpose of this simulation study is to determine the effects of stroke-related changes in key neuromuscular factors on the gear ratio.

Methods: A modified Hill-type model of the medial gastrocnemius was developed to determine the gear ratio for a given muscle activation level and musculotendon length.

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The generation of isometric force at the hand can be mediated by activating a few motor modules. Stroke induces alterations in motor modules underlying steady-state isometric force generation in the human upper extremity (UE). However, how the altered motor modules impact task performance (force production) remains unclear as stroke survivors develop and converge to the three-dimensional (3D) target force.

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The purpose of this study was to investigate the potential effects of key neuromuscular factors on muscle activation-force relationships, thereby helping us understand abnormal EMG-force relationships often reported in chronic stroke-impaired muscles. A modified Hill-type muscle model was developed to calculate muscle force production for a given muscle activation level and musculotendon length. Model parameters used to characterize musculotendon unit properties of medial gastrocnemius were adjusted to simulate known stroke-related changes in neuromuscular factors (e.

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. Botulinum toxin (BT) induced cholinergic denervation of hyperactive motor units (MUs) is a clinically accepted and extensively practiced way of managing focal spasticity after stroke. The denervation potentially initiates a temporary reorganization of the MU activation patterns and structures by inducing the emergence of a large number of newly innervated muscle fibers.

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Deficits in locomotor function, including impairments in walking speed and balance, are major problems for many individuals with incomplete spinal cord injury (iSCI). However, it remains unclear which type of training paradigms are more effective in improving balance, particularly dynamic balance, in individuals with iSCI. The purpose of this study was to determine whether anodal transcutaneous spinal direct current stimulation (tsDCS) can facilitate learning of balance control during walking in individuals with iSCI.

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Locomotor adaptation to novel walking patterns induced by external perturbation has been tested to enhance motor learning for improving gait parameters in individuals poststroke. However, little is known regarding whether repeated adaptation and de-adaptation to the externally perturbed walking pattern may facilitate or degrade the retention of locomotor learning. In this study, we examined whether the intermittent adaptation to novel walking patterns elicited by external perturbation induces greater retention of the adapted locomotion in stroke survivors, compared with effects of the continuous adaptation.

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The objective of this study was to characterize the effects of intramuscular botulinum toxin (BT) injections on the electromechanical delay (EMD) in spastic human biceps muscles. The EMD is calculated as the time lag between the muscle activation onset, as recorded from the surface electromyogram (sEMG), and the onset of recorded force. In a cohort of chronic stroke survivors, we compared the computed EMD derived from the spastic (injected) biceps brachii with that from the contralateral muscle.

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