Background: Balance impairments are common in children with cerebral palsy (CP). Muscle activity during perturbed standing is higher in children with CP than in typically developing (TD) children, but we know surprisingly little about how sensorimotor processes for balance control are altered in CP. Sensorimotor processing refers to how the nervous system translates incoming sensory information about body motion into motor commands to activate muscles. In healthy adults, muscle activity in response to backward support-surface translations during standing can be reconstructed by center of mass (CoM) feedback, i.e., by a linear combination of delayed (due to neural transmission times) CoM displacement, velocity, and acceleration. The level of muscle activity in relation to changes in CoM kinematics, i.e., the feedback gains, provides a metric of the sensitivity of the muscle response to CoM perturbations.
Research Question: Can CoM feedback explain reactive muscle activity in children with CP, yet with higher feedback gains than in TD children?
Methods: We perturbed standing balance by backward support-surface translations of different magnitudes in 20 children with CP and 20 age-matched TD children and investigated CoM feedback pathways underlying reactive muscle activity in the triceps surae and tibialis anterior.
Results: Reactive muscle activity could be reconstructed by delayed feedback of CoM kinematics and hence similar sensorimotor pathways might underlie balance control in children with CP and TD children. However, sensitivities of both agonistic and antagonistic muscle activity to CoM displacement and velocity were higher in children with CP than in TD children. The increased sensitivity of balance correcting responses to CoM movement might explain the stiffer kinematic response, i.e., smaller CoM movement, observed in children with CP.
Significance: The sensorimotor model used here provided unique insights into how CP affects neural processing underlying balance control. Sensorimotor sensitivities might be a useful metric to diagnose balance impairments.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10517062 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gaitpost.2023.03.014 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!