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Effects of Perturbations to Balance on Neuromechanics of Fast Changes in Direction during Locomotion

This study investigated whether the modular control of changes in direction while running is influenced by perturbations to balance. Twenty-two healthy men performed 90° side-step unperturbed cutting manoeuvres while running (UPT) as well as manoeuvres perturbed at initial contact (PTB, 10 cm transl...

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Autores principales: Oliveira, Anderson Souza, Silva, Priscila Brito, Lund, Morten Enemark, Gizzi, Leonardo, Farina, Dario, Kersting, Uwe Gustav
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3601114/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23527079
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0059029
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author Oliveira, Anderson Souza
Silva, Priscila Brito
Lund, Morten Enemark
Gizzi, Leonardo
Farina, Dario
Kersting, Uwe Gustav
author_facet Oliveira, Anderson Souza
Silva, Priscila Brito
Lund, Morten Enemark
Gizzi, Leonardo
Farina, Dario
Kersting, Uwe Gustav
author_sort Oliveira, Anderson Souza
collection PubMed
description This study investigated whether the modular control of changes in direction while running is influenced by perturbations to balance. Twenty-two healthy men performed 90° side-step unperturbed cutting manoeuvres while running (UPT) as well as manoeuvres perturbed at initial contact (PTB, 10 cm translation of a moveable force platform). Surface EMG activity from 16 muscles of the supporting limb and trunk, kinematics, and ground reaction forces were recorded. Motor modules composed by muscle weightings and their respective activation signals were extracted from the EMG signals by non-negative matrix factorization. Knee joint moments, co-contraction ratios and co-contraction indexes (hamstrings/quadriceps) and motor modules were compared between UPT and PTB. Five motor modules were enough to reconstruct UPT and PTB EMG activity (variance accounted for UPT  = 92±5%, PTB = 90±6%). Moreover, higher similarities between muscle weightings from UPT and PTB (similarity = 0.83±0.08) were observed in comparison to the similarities between the activation signals that drive the temporal properties of the motor modules (similarity = 0.71±0.18). In addition, the reconstruction of PTB EMG from fixed muscle weightings from UPT resulted in higher reconstruction quality (82±6%) when compared to reconstruction of PTB EMG from fixed activation signals from UPT (59±11%). Perturbations at initial contact reduced knee abduction moments (7%), as well as co-contraction ratio (11%) and co-contraction index (12%) shortly after the perturbation onset. These changes in co-contraction ratio and co-contraction index were caused by a reduced activation of hamstrings that was also verified in the activation signals of the specific motor module related to initial contact. Our results suggested that perturbations to balance influence modular control of cutting manoeuvres, especially the temporal properties of muscle recruitment, due to altered afferent inputs to the motor patterns. Furthermore, reduced knee stability during perturbed events may be related to overall control of lower limb muscles.
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spelling pubmed-36011142013-03-22 Effects of Perturbations to Balance on Neuromechanics of Fast Changes in Direction during Locomotion Oliveira, Anderson Souza Silva, Priscila Brito Lund, Morten Enemark Gizzi, Leonardo Farina, Dario Kersting, Uwe Gustav PLoS One Research Article This study investigated whether the modular control of changes in direction while running is influenced by perturbations to balance. Twenty-two healthy men performed 90° side-step unperturbed cutting manoeuvres while running (UPT) as well as manoeuvres perturbed at initial contact (PTB, 10 cm translation of a moveable force platform). Surface EMG activity from 16 muscles of the supporting limb and trunk, kinematics, and ground reaction forces were recorded. Motor modules composed by muscle weightings and their respective activation signals were extracted from the EMG signals by non-negative matrix factorization. Knee joint moments, co-contraction ratios and co-contraction indexes (hamstrings/quadriceps) and motor modules were compared between UPT and PTB. Five motor modules were enough to reconstruct UPT and PTB EMG activity (variance accounted for UPT  = 92±5%, PTB = 90±6%). Moreover, higher similarities between muscle weightings from UPT and PTB (similarity = 0.83±0.08) were observed in comparison to the similarities between the activation signals that drive the temporal properties of the motor modules (similarity = 0.71±0.18). In addition, the reconstruction of PTB EMG from fixed muscle weightings from UPT resulted in higher reconstruction quality (82±6%) when compared to reconstruction of PTB EMG from fixed activation signals from UPT (59±11%). Perturbations at initial contact reduced knee abduction moments (7%), as well as co-contraction ratio (11%) and co-contraction index (12%) shortly after the perturbation onset. These changes in co-contraction ratio and co-contraction index were caused by a reduced activation of hamstrings that was also verified in the activation signals of the specific motor module related to initial contact. Our results suggested that perturbations to balance influence modular control of cutting manoeuvres, especially the temporal properties of muscle recruitment, due to altered afferent inputs to the motor patterns. Furthermore, reduced knee stability during perturbed events may be related to overall control of lower limb muscles. Public Library of Science 2013-03-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3601114/ /pubmed/23527079 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0059029 Text en © 2013 Oliveira et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Oliveira, Anderson Souza
Silva, Priscila Brito
Lund, Morten Enemark
Gizzi, Leonardo
Farina, Dario
Kersting, Uwe Gustav
Effects of Perturbations to Balance on Neuromechanics of Fast Changes in Direction during Locomotion
title Effects of Perturbations to Balance on Neuromechanics of Fast Changes in Direction during Locomotion
title_full Effects of Perturbations to Balance on Neuromechanics of Fast Changes in Direction during Locomotion
title_fullStr Effects of Perturbations to Balance on Neuromechanics of Fast Changes in Direction during Locomotion
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Perturbations to Balance on Neuromechanics of Fast Changes in Direction during Locomotion
title_short Effects of Perturbations to Balance on Neuromechanics of Fast Changes in Direction during Locomotion
title_sort effects of perturbations to balance on neuromechanics of fast changes in direction during locomotion
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3601114/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23527079
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0059029
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