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Altered accelerator pedal control in a driving simulator in people with diabetic peripheral neuropathy

AIM: To investigate whether the sensory‐motor impairment attributable to diabetic peripheral neuropathy would affect control of the accelerator pedal during a driving simulator task. METHODS: A total of 32 active drivers, 11 with diabetic peripheral neuropathy (mean ± sd age 67±5.0 years), 10 with d...

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Autores principales: Perazzolo, M., Reeves, N. D., Bowling, F. L., Boulton, A. J. M., Raffi, M., Marple‐Horvat, D. E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7004113/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30924960
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/dme.13957
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author Perazzolo, M.
Reeves, N. D.
Bowling, F. L.
Boulton, A. J. M.
Raffi, M.
Marple‐Horvat, D. E.
author_facet Perazzolo, M.
Reeves, N. D.
Bowling, F. L.
Boulton, A. J. M.
Raffi, M.
Marple‐Horvat, D. E.
author_sort Perazzolo, M.
collection PubMed
description AIM: To investigate whether the sensory‐motor impairment attributable to diabetic peripheral neuropathy would affect control of the accelerator pedal during a driving simulator task. METHODS: A total of 32 active drivers, 11 with diabetic peripheral neuropathy (mean ± sd age 67±5.0 years), 10 with diabetes but no neuropathy (diabetes group; mean ± sd age 62±10 years), and 11 healthy individuals without diabetes (healthy group; mean ± sd age 60±11 years), undertook a test on a dynamometer to assess ankle plantar flexor muscle strength and ankle joint proprioception function of the right leg, in addition to a driving simulator task. The following variables were measured: maximal ankle plantar flexor muscle strength; speed of strength generation (Nm/s); and ankle joint proprioception (ankle repositioning error, degrees). In the driving simulator task, driving speed (mph), accelerator pedal signal (degrees) and the duration of specific ‘loss‐of‐control events’ (s) were measured during two drives (Drive 1, Drive 2). RESULTS: Participants with diabetic peripheral neuropathy had a lower speed of strength generation (P<0.001), lower maximal ankle plantar flexor muscle strength (P<0.001) and impaired ankle proprioception (P=0.034) compared to healthy participants. The diabetic peripheral neuropathy group drove more slowly compared with the healthy group (Drive 1 P=0.048; Drive 2 P=0.042) and showed marked differences in the use of the accelerator pedal compared to both the diabetes group (P=0.010) and the healthy group (P=0.002). Participants with diabetic peripheral neuropathy had the longest duration of loss‐of‐control events, but after one drive, this was greatly reduced (P=0.023). CONCLUSIONS: Muscle function, ankle proprioception and accelerator pedal control are all affected in people with diabetic peripheral neuropathy, adversely influencing driving performance, but potential for improvement with targeted practice remains possible.
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spelling pubmed-70041132020-02-11 Altered accelerator pedal control in a driving simulator in people with diabetic peripheral neuropathy Perazzolo, M. Reeves, N. D. Bowling, F. L. Boulton, A. J. M. Raffi, M. Marple‐Horvat, D. E. Diabet Med Research Articles AIM: To investigate whether the sensory‐motor impairment attributable to diabetic peripheral neuropathy would affect control of the accelerator pedal during a driving simulator task. METHODS: A total of 32 active drivers, 11 with diabetic peripheral neuropathy (mean ± sd age 67±5.0 years), 10 with diabetes but no neuropathy (diabetes group; mean ± sd age 62±10 years), and 11 healthy individuals without diabetes (healthy group; mean ± sd age 60±11 years), undertook a test on a dynamometer to assess ankle plantar flexor muscle strength and ankle joint proprioception function of the right leg, in addition to a driving simulator task. The following variables were measured: maximal ankle plantar flexor muscle strength; speed of strength generation (Nm/s); and ankle joint proprioception (ankle repositioning error, degrees). In the driving simulator task, driving speed (mph), accelerator pedal signal (degrees) and the duration of specific ‘loss‐of‐control events’ (s) were measured during two drives (Drive 1, Drive 2). RESULTS: Participants with diabetic peripheral neuropathy had a lower speed of strength generation (P<0.001), lower maximal ankle plantar flexor muscle strength (P<0.001) and impaired ankle proprioception (P=0.034) compared to healthy participants. The diabetic peripheral neuropathy group drove more slowly compared with the healthy group (Drive 1 P=0.048; Drive 2 P=0.042) and showed marked differences in the use of the accelerator pedal compared to both the diabetes group (P=0.010) and the healthy group (P=0.002). Participants with diabetic peripheral neuropathy had the longest duration of loss‐of‐control events, but after one drive, this was greatly reduced (P=0.023). CONCLUSIONS: Muscle function, ankle proprioception and accelerator pedal control are all affected in people with diabetic peripheral neuropathy, adversely influencing driving performance, but potential for improvement with targeted practice remains possible. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-05-06 2020-02 /pmc/articles/PMC7004113/ /pubmed/30924960 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/dme.13957 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Diabetic Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Diabetes UK. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Perazzolo, M.
Reeves, N. D.
Bowling, F. L.
Boulton, A. J. M.
Raffi, M.
Marple‐Horvat, D. E.
Altered accelerator pedal control in a driving simulator in people with diabetic peripheral neuropathy
title Altered accelerator pedal control in a driving simulator in people with diabetic peripheral neuropathy
title_full Altered accelerator pedal control in a driving simulator in people with diabetic peripheral neuropathy
title_fullStr Altered accelerator pedal control in a driving simulator in people with diabetic peripheral neuropathy
title_full_unstemmed Altered accelerator pedal control in a driving simulator in people with diabetic peripheral neuropathy
title_short Altered accelerator pedal control in a driving simulator in people with diabetic peripheral neuropathy
title_sort altered accelerator pedal control in a driving simulator in people with diabetic peripheral neuropathy
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7004113/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30924960
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/dme.13957
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