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1.
J Neurophysiol ; 125(4): 1367-1381, 2021 04 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33534650

RESUMO

Arm cycling is a bimanual motor task used in medical rehabilitation and in sports training. Understanding how muscle coordination changes across different biomechanical constraints in arm cycling is a step toward improved rehabilitation approaches. This exploratory study aims to get new insights on motor control during arm cycling. To achieve our main goal, we used the muscle synergies analysis to test three hypotheses: 1) body position with respect to gravity (sitting and supine) has an effect on muscle synergies; 2) the movement size (crank length) has an effect on the synergistic behavior; 3) the bimanual cranking mode (asynchronous and synchronous) requires different synergistic control. Thirteen able-bodied volunteers performed arm cranking on a custom-made device with unconnected cranks, which allowed testing three different conditions: body position (sitting vs. supine), crank length (10 cm vs. 15 cm), and cranking mode (synchronous vs. asynchronous). For each of the eight possible combinations, subjects cycled for 30 s while electromyography of eight muscles (four from each arm) were recorded: biceps brachii, triceps brachii, anterior deltoid, and posterior deltoid. Muscle synergies in this eight-dimensional muscle space were extracted by nonnegative matrix factorization. Four synergies accounted for over 90% of muscle activation variances in all conditions. Results showed that synergies were affected by body position and cranking mode but practically unaffected by movement size. These results suggest that the central nervous system may employ different motor control strategies in response to external constraints such as cranking mode and body position during arm cycling.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Recent studies analyzed muscle synergies in lower limb cycling. Here, we examine upper limb cycling and specifically the effect of body position with respect to gravity, movement size, and cranking mode on muscle coordination during arm cranking tasks. We show that altered body position and cranking mode affects modular organization of muscle activities. To our knowledge, this is the first study assessing motor control through muscle synergies framework during upper limb cycling with different constraints.


Assuntos
Braço/fisiologia , Fenômenos Biomecânicos/fisiologia , Atividade Motora/fisiologia , Músculo Esquelético/fisiologia , Desempenho Psicomotor/fisiologia , Adulto , Eletromiografia , Feminino , Gravitação , Humanos , Masculino , Adulto Jovem
2.
J Hum Kinet ; 76: 175-189, 2021 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33603933

RESUMO

Arm cycling on an ergometer is common in sports training and rehabilitation protocols. The hand movement is constrained along a circular path, and the user is working against a resistance, maintaining a cadence. Even if the desired hand trajectory is given, there is the flexibility to choose patterns of joint coordination and muscle activation, given the kinematic redundancy of the upper limb. With changing external load, motor noise and changing joint stiffness may affect the pose of the arm even though the endpoint trajectory is unchanged. The objective of this study was to examine how the crank resistance influences the variances of joint configuration and muscle activation. Fifteen healthy participants performed arm cranking on an arm-cycle ergometer both unimanually and bimanually with a cadence of 60 rpm against three crank resistances. Joint configuration was represented in a 3-dimensional joint space defined by inter-segmental joint angles, while muscle activation in a 4-dimensional "muscle activation space" defined by EMGs of 4 arm muscles. Joint configuration variance in the course of arm cranking was not affected by crank resistance, whereas muscle activation variance was proportional to the square of muscle activation. The shape of the variance time profiles for both joint configuration and muscle activation was not affected by crank resistance. Contrary to the prevailing assumption that an increased motor noise would affect the variance of auxiliary movements, the influence of noise doesn't appear at the joint configuration level even when the system is redundant. Our results suggest the separation of kinematic- and force-control, via mechanisms that are compensating for dynamic nonlinearities. Arm cranking may be suitable when the aim is to perform training under different load conditions, preserving stable and secure control of joint movements and muscle activations.

3.
IEEE Int Conf Rehabil Robot ; 2019: 264-269, 2019 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31374640

RESUMO

The relationship between the smoothness of the upper limb endpoint movement and multi joint angular motion is a function of the individual joint angular velocities, accelerations, and jerks as well as the instantaneous arm configuration and its rate of change during movement execution. We compared the contribution of jerk components to the total endpoint jerk in able bodied participants who performed arm cranking movements on an arm cranking device where the two arms could crank independently. The results of this investigation suggest that the most dominant components of the end effector jerk are related to both the angular jerks and to the change of arm configuration pose. This jerk partitioning is much stronger as it was found previously for both reaching arm movements and single hand cranking. This shows the task specificity of the decomposition of endpoint jerk and the effect that bi-manual tasks can have on the smoothness of movements. The proposed decomposition may give useful information in why certain bi-manual rehabilitation processes are more useful than others.


Assuntos
Braço/fisiologia , Articulação da Mão/fisiologia , Modelos Biológicos , Movimento/fisiologia , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino
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