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Muscle synergy analysis yields an efficient and physiologically relevant method of assessing stroke

The Fugl-Meyer Assessment is widely used to test motor function in stroke survivors. In the Fugl-Meyer Assessment, stroke survivors perform several movement tasks and clinicians subjectively rate the performance of each task item. The individual task items in the Fugl-Meyer Assessment are selected o...

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Autores principales: Funato, Tetsuro, Hattori, Noriaki, Yozu, Arito, An, Qi, Oya, Tomomichi, Shirafuji, Shouhei, Jino, Akihiro, Miura, Kyoichi, Martino, Giovanni, Berger, Denise, Miyai, Ichiro, Ota, Jun, Ivanenko, Yury, d’Avella, Andrea, Seki, Kazuhiko
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9374474/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35974798
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcac200
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author Funato, Tetsuro
Hattori, Noriaki
Yozu, Arito
An, Qi
Oya, Tomomichi
Shirafuji, Shouhei
Jino, Akihiro
Miura, Kyoichi
Martino, Giovanni
Berger, Denise
Miyai, Ichiro
Ota, Jun
Ivanenko, Yury
d’Avella, Andrea
Seki, Kazuhiko
author_facet Funato, Tetsuro
Hattori, Noriaki
Yozu, Arito
An, Qi
Oya, Tomomichi
Shirafuji, Shouhei
Jino, Akihiro
Miura, Kyoichi
Martino, Giovanni
Berger, Denise
Miyai, Ichiro
Ota, Jun
Ivanenko, Yury
d’Avella, Andrea
Seki, Kazuhiko
author_sort Funato, Tetsuro
collection PubMed
description The Fugl-Meyer Assessment is widely used to test motor function in stroke survivors. In the Fugl-Meyer Assessment, stroke survivors perform several movement tasks and clinicians subjectively rate the performance of each task item. The individual task items in the Fugl-Meyer Assessment are selected on the basis of clinical experience, and their physiological relevance has not yet been evaluated. In the present study, we aimed to objectively rate the performance of task items by measuring the muscle activity of 41 muscles from the upper body while stroke survivors and healthy participants performed 37 Fugl-Meyer Assessment upper extremity task items. We used muscle synergy analysis to compare muscle activity between subjects and found that 13 muscle synergies in the healthy participants (which we defined as standard synergies) were able to reconstruct all of the muscle activity in the Fugl-Meyer Assessment. Among the standard synergies, synergies involving the upper arms, forearms and fingers were activated to varying degrees during different task items. In contrast, synergies involving posterior trunk muscles were activated during all tasks, which suggests the importance of posterior trunk muscle synergies throughout all sequences. Furthermore, we noted the inactivation of posterior trunk muscle synergies in stroke survivors with severe but not mild impairments, suggesting that lower trunk stability and the underlying activity of posterior trunk muscle synergies may have a strong influence on stroke severity and recovery. By comparing the synergies of stroke survivors with standard synergies, we also revealed that some synergies in stroke survivors corresponded to merged standard synergies; the merging rate increased with the impairment of stroke survivors. Moreover, the degrees of severity-dependent changes in the merging rate (the merging rate–severity relationship) were different among different task items. This relationship was significant for 26 task items only and not for the other 11 task items. Because muscle synergy analysis evaluates coordinated muscle activities, this different dependency suggests that these 26 task items are appropriate for evaluating muscle coordination and the extent of its impairment in stroke survivors. Overall, we conclude that the Fugl-Meyer Assessment reflects physiological function and muscle coordination impairment and suggest that it could be performed using a subset of the 37 task items.
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spelling pubmed-93744742022-08-15 Muscle synergy analysis yields an efficient and physiologically relevant method of assessing stroke Funato, Tetsuro Hattori, Noriaki Yozu, Arito An, Qi Oya, Tomomichi Shirafuji, Shouhei Jino, Akihiro Miura, Kyoichi Martino, Giovanni Berger, Denise Miyai, Ichiro Ota, Jun Ivanenko, Yury d’Avella, Andrea Seki, Kazuhiko Brain Commun Original Article The Fugl-Meyer Assessment is widely used to test motor function in stroke survivors. In the Fugl-Meyer Assessment, stroke survivors perform several movement tasks and clinicians subjectively rate the performance of each task item. The individual task items in the Fugl-Meyer Assessment are selected on the basis of clinical experience, and their physiological relevance has not yet been evaluated. In the present study, we aimed to objectively rate the performance of task items by measuring the muscle activity of 41 muscles from the upper body while stroke survivors and healthy participants performed 37 Fugl-Meyer Assessment upper extremity task items. We used muscle synergy analysis to compare muscle activity between subjects and found that 13 muscle synergies in the healthy participants (which we defined as standard synergies) were able to reconstruct all of the muscle activity in the Fugl-Meyer Assessment. Among the standard synergies, synergies involving the upper arms, forearms and fingers were activated to varying degrees during different task items. In contrast, synergies involving posterior trunk muscles were activated during all tasks, which suggests the importance of posterior trunk muscle synergies throughout all sequences. Furthermore, we noted the inactivation of posterior trunk muscle synergies in stroke survivors with severe but not mild impairments, suggesting that lower trunk stability and the underlying activity of posterior trunk muscle synergies may have a strong influence on stroke severity and recovery. By comparing the synergies of stroke survivors with standard synergies, we also revealed that some synergies in stroke survivors corresponded to merged standard synergies; the merging rate increased with the impairment of stroke survivors. Moreover, the degrees of severity-dependent changes in the merging rate (the merging rate–severity relationship) were different among different task items. This relationship was significant for 26 task items only and not for the other 11 task items. Because muscle synergy analysis evaluates coordinated muscle activities, this different dependency suggests that these 26 task items are appropriate for evaluating muscle coordination and the extent of its impairment in stroke survivors. Overall, we conclude that the Fugl-Meyer Assessment reflects physiological function and muscle coordination impairment and suggest that it could be performed using a subset of the 37 task items. Oxford University Press 2022-08-09 /pmc/articles/PMC9374474/ /pubmed/35974798 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcac200 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Funato, Tetsuro
Hattori, Noriaki
Yozu, Arito
An, Qi
Oya, Tomomichi
Shirafuji, Shouhei
Jino, Akihiro
Miura, Kyoichi
Martino, Giovanni
Berger, Denise
Miyai, Ichiro
Ota, Jun
Ivanenko, Yury
d’Avella, Andrea
Seki, Kazuhiko
Muscle synergy analysis yields an efficient and physiologically relevant method of assessing stroke
title Muscle synergy analysis yields an efficient and physiologically relevant method of assessing stroke
title_full Muscle synergy analysis yields an efficient and physiologically relevant method of assessing stroke
title_fullStr Muscle synergy analysis yields an efficient and physiologically relevant method of assessing stroke
title_full_unstemmed Muscle synergy analysis yields an efficient and physiologically relevant method of assessing stroke
title_short Muscle synergy analysis yields an efficient and physiologically relevant method of assessing stroke
title_sort muscle synergy analysis yields an efficient and physiologically relevant method of assessing stroke
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9374474/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35974798
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcac200
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