AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study examined the impact of ankle joint position on cutaneous reflexes in the peroneus longus (PL) muscle among patients with chronic ankle instability (CAI) compared to age-matched controls.
  • - Researchers stimulated the sural nerve while participants stood in different ankle positions, revealing that CAI patients had a more pronounced suppressive middle latency cutaneous reflex (MLR) during neutral standing than controls, but not during extreme inversion.
  • - The results indicated that CAI patients experienced deterioration in their sensory-motor system, affecting both reflex response and ankle position sense, highlighting differences between them and healthy controls.

Article Abstract

This study aimed to investigate how the cutaneous reflexes in the peroneus longus (PL) muscle are affected by changing the ankle joint position in patients with chronic ankle instability (CAI). We also investigated the correlation between the degree of reflex modulation and angle position sense of the ankle joint. The participants were 19 patients with CAI and 20 age-matched controls. Cutaneous reflexes were elicited by applying non-noxious electrical stimulation to the sural nerve at the ankle joint in the neutral standing and eversion/inversion standing positions. The suppressive middle latency cutaneous reflex (MLR; ~ 70-120 ms) and angle position sense of the ankle joint were assessed. During neutral standing, the gain of the suppressive MLR was more prominent in the CAI patients than in controls, although no significant difference was seen during 30° inversion standing. In addition, the ratios of the suppressive MLR and background electromyography in a neutral position were significantly larger than those at the 15°, 25°, and 30° inversion positions in CAI patients. No such difference was seen in control individuals. Furthermore, the correlations between reflex modulation degree and position sense error were quite different in CAI patients compared to controls. These findings suggest that the sensory-motor system was deteriorated in CAI patients due to changes in the PL cutaneous reflex pathway excitability and position sense of the ankle joint.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00221-022-06406-7DOI Listing

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