AI Article Synopsis

  • Prolonged quadriceps weakness following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACL-R) increases the risk of re-injury and is linked to worse outcomes, including osteoarthritis, which may have neurological origins.
  • The study aimed to explore the relationship between brain activity during knee movements and quadriceps strength asymmetry in 44 participants (22 post-ACL-R and 22 controls).
  • Results showed that lower strength (quadriceps limb symmetry index, Q-LSI) correlated with increased activity in specific brain regions; those not meeting strength guidelines exhibited more activity in the lingual gyrus compared to those who did and healthy controls.

Article Abstract

Prolonged treatment resistant quadriceps weakness after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACL-R) contributes to re-injury risk, poor patient outcomes, and earlier development of osteoarthritis. The origin of post-injury weakness is in part neurological in nature, but it is unknown whether regional brain activity is related to clinical metrics of quadriceps weakness. Thus, the purpose of this investigation was to better understand the neural contributions to quadriceps weakness after injury by evaluating the relationship between brain activity for a quadriceps-dominated knee task (repeated cycles of unilateral knee flexion/extension from 45° to 0°), , and strength asymmetry in individuals returned to activity after ACL-R. Forty-four participants were recruited (22 with unilateral ACL reconstruction; 22 controls) and peak isokinetic knee extensor torque was assessed at 60°/s to calculate quadriceps limb symmetry index (Q-LSI, ratio of involved/uninvolved limb). Correlations were used to determine the relationship of mean % signal change within key sensorimotor brain regions and Q-LSI. Brain activity was also evaluated group wise based on clinical recommendations for strength (Q-LSI < 90%, n = 12; Q-LSI ≥ 90%, n = 10; controls, all n = 22 Q-LSI ≥ 90%). Lower Q-LSI was related to increased activity in the contralateral premotor cortex and lingual gyrus (p < .05). Those who did not meet clinical recommendations for strength demonstrated greater lingual gyrus activity compared to those who met clinical recommendations Q-LSI ≥ 90 and healthy controls (p < 0.05). Asymmetrically weak ACL-R patients displayed greater cortical activity than patients with no underlying asymmetry and healthy controls.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10192374PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-34260-2DOI Listing

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