| Literature DB >> 26407586 |
Ebonie Rio1, Dawson Kidgell2, G Lorimer Moseley3, Jamie Gaida4, Sean Docking1, Craig Purdam5, Jill Cook1.
Abstract
Tendinopathy can be resistant to treatment and often recurs, implying that current treatment approaches are suboptimal. Rehabilitation programmes that have been successful in terms of pain reduction and return to sport outcomes usually include strength training. Muscle activation can induce analgesia, improving self-efficacy associated with reducing one's own pain. Furthermore, strength training is beneficial for tendon matrix structure, muscle properties and limb biomechanics. However, current tendon rehabilitation may not adequately address the corticospinal control of the muscle, which may result in altered control of muscle recruitment and the consequent tendon load, and this may contribute to recalcitrance or symptom recurrence. Outcomes of interest include the effect of strength training on tendon pain, corticospinal excitability and short interval cortical inhibition. The aims of this concept paper are to: (1) review what is known about changes to the primary motor cortex and motor control in tendinopathy, (2) identify the parameters shown to induce neuroplasticity in strength training and (3) align these principles with tendon rehabilitation loading protocols to introduce a combination approach termed as tendon neuroplastic training. Strength training is a powerful modulator of the central nervous system. In particular, corticospinal inputs are essential for motor unit recruitment and activation; however, specific strength training parameters are important for neuroplasticity. Strength training that is externally paced and akin to a skilled movement task has been shown to not only reduce tendon pain, but modulate excitatory and inhibitory control of the muscle and therefore, potentially tendon load. An improved understanding of the methods that maximise the opportunity for neuroplasticity may be an important progression in how we prescribe exercise-based rehabilitation in tendinopathy for pain modulation and potentially restoration of the corticospinal control of the muscle-tendon complex. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/Entities:
Keywords: Brain; Exercises; Quadriceps; Tendinopathy; Tendon
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26407586 PMCID: PMC4752665 DOI: 10.1136/bjsports-2015-095215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Sports Med ISSN: 0306-3674 Impact factor: 13.800
Figure 1Summary of different approaches of tendon rehabilitation, and effects on strength and motor control. (A) Passive intervention fails to address strength and capacity of the tendon or muscle as load is required to stimulate these tissues; this leads to an inability to perform the task and an undesired outcome on the left. An example may be an injection into the tendon aimed at restoring tendon structure. Simultaneously, motor control has not been addressed; thus, the drive to the muscle may be unchanged and the outcome remains undesirable. (B) This likely describes most current clinical rehabilitative approaches that focus on strength. The local tissue has probably improved in its characteristics (tendon mechanical properties, muscle strength); however, the drive to the muscle has not been addressed due to the nature of self-paced resistance training; thus, the outcome may still be undesired (perhaps in terms of recurrence). (C) In this example, the focus may be purely on trying to alter the biomechanics or motor control with repetition and feedback about the task (eg, proprioception exercises). This not only has been shown to have poor integration into the sporting environment, it also has not addressed the tissue capacity. Therefore, the local feedback to the central nervous system is likely to maintain the motor control pattern as an ongoing protective or adaptive strategy. (D) The concept of tendon neuroplastic training includes using strength training to address the tendon as load is the only stimulus shown to promote the matrix. Furthermore, strength training improves muscle architecture. In this example, the external pacing of strength training also serves to address cortical muscle control in an attempt to improve the muscle recruitment pattern and therefore, also tendon load.
Figure 2Individual weekly response to tendon neuroplastic training (isometric protocol). Mean±SEM MEP amplitude (note error bars are too small to be seen; MEP, motor evoked potential).
Figure 3Individual cortical inhibition responses to tendon neuroplastic training by muscle contraction type. Isometric: p=0.06, isotonic: p=0.25, TNT group including both paradigms: p=0.008. Each individual participant’s data are provided with diamond denoting preintervention and triangle denoting postintervention for that person.