M Patel1, S Gomez, D Lush, P A Fransson. 1. Department of Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck surgery, Clinical Sciences, Lund, Lund University, S-221 85 Lund, Sweden.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Investigate the relationship between changes in lower limb EMG root mean square (RMS) activity and changes in body movement during perturbed standing. Specifically, linear movement variance, torque variance and body posture were correlated against tibialis anterior and gastrocnemius RMS EMG activity during perturbed standing by vibration of the calf muscles. METHODS: Eighteen healthy participants (mean age 29.1 years) stood quietly for 30s before vibration pulses were randomly applied to the calf muscles over a period of 200 s with eyes open or closed. Movement variance, torque variance and RMS EMG activity were separated into five periods, thereby allowing us to explore any time-varying changes of the relationships. RESULTS: Changes of tibialis anterior muscles EMG activity were positively correlated with changes in linear movement variance and torque variance throughout most of the trials, and negatively correlated with some mean angular position changes during the last 2 min of the trials. Moreover, the initial changes in Gastrocnemius EMG activity were associated with initial changes of mean angular position. Additionally, both tibialis anterior and gastrocnemius muscle activities were more involved in the initial control of stability with eyes closed than with eyes open. CONCLUSIONS: Visual information and adaptation change the association between muscle activity and movement when standing is perturbed by calf muscle vibration. SIGNIFICANCE: Access to visual information changes the standing strategy to calf muscle vibrations. Training evoking adaptation could benefit those susceptible to falls by optimising the association between muscle activities and stabilising body movement.
OBJECTIVE: Investigate the relationship between changes in lower limb EMG root mean square (RMS) activity and changes in body movement during perturbed standing. Specifically, linear movement variance, torque variance and body posture were correlated against tibialis anterior and gastrocnemius RMS EMG activity during perturbed standing by vibration of the calf muscles. METHODS: Eighteen healthy participants (mean age 29.1 years) stood quietly for 30s before vibration pulses were randomly applied to the calf muscles over a period of 200 s with eyes open or closed. Movement variance, torque variance and RMS EMG activity were separated into five periods, thereby allowing us to explore any time-varying changes of the relationships. RESULTS: Changes of tibialis anterior muscles EMG activity were positively correlated with changes in linear movement variance and torque variance throughout most of the trials, and negatively correlated with some mean angular position changes during the last 2 min of the trials. Moreover, the initial changes in Gastrocnemius EMG activity were associated with initial changes of mean angular position. Additionally, both tibialis anterior and gastrocnemius muscle activities were more involved in the initial control of stability with eyes closed than with eyes open. CONCLUSIONS: Visual information and adaptation change the association between muscle activity and movement when standing is perturbed by calf muscle vibration. SIGNIFICANCE: Access to visual information changes the standing strategy to calf muscle vibrations. Training evoking adaptation could benefit those susceptible to falls by optimising the association between muscle activities and stabilising body movement.
Authors: Hannes Petersen; Mitesh Patel; Einar F Ingason; Einar J Einarsson; Ásgeir Haraldsson; Per-Anders Fransson Journal: PLoS One Date: 2014-11-18 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Andrea Tigrini; Federica Verdini; Marco Maiolatesi; Andrea Monteriù; Francesco Ferracuti; Sandro Fioretti; Sauro Longhi; Alessandro Mengarelli Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol Date: 2022-01-21
Authors: Magdalena Piecha; Grzegorz Juras; Piotr Król; Grzegorz Sobota; Anna Polak; Bogdan Bacik Journal: PLoS One Date: 2014-02-10 Impact factor: 3.240