| Literature DB >> 28053789 |
Jason Bouffard1, Laurent J Bouyer1, Jean-Sébastien Roy1, Catherine Mercier1.
Abstract
Cutaneous pain experienced during locomotor training was previously reported to interfere with retention assessed in pain-free conditions. To determine whether this interference reflects consolidation deficits or a difficulty to transfer motor skills acquired in the presence of pain to a pain-free context, this study evaluated the effect of pain induced during both the acquisition and retention phases of locomotor learning. Healthy participants performed a locomotor adaptation task (robotized orthosis perturbing ankle movements during swing) on two consecutive days. Capsaicin cream was applied around participants' ankle on both days for the Pain group, while the Control group was always pain-free. Changes in movement errors caused by the perturbation were measured to assess global motor performance; temporal distribution of errors and electromyographic activity were used to characterize motor strategies. Pain did not interfere with global performance during the acquisition or the retention phases but was associated with a shift in movement error center of gravity to later in the swing phase, suggesting a reduction in anticipatory strategy. Therefore, previously reported retention deficits could be explained by contextual changes between acquisition and retention tests. This difficulty in transferring skills from one context to another could be due to pain-related changes in motor strategy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28053789 PMCID: PMC5178857 DOI: 10.1155/2016/8539096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Plast ISSN: 1687-5443 Impact factor: 3.599
Figure 1(a) General protocol of the experiment: blue and red arrows illustrate phases of the experiment performed without and with pain, respectively. (b) Robotized ankle-foot orthosis (rAFO). (c) Ankle kinematics outcome measures: the upper panel presents ankle angle during baseline gait (black) and adaptation (gray) for the whole stride duration. The lower panel illustrates the signed and absolute ankle movement error during the swing phase. The gray shaded area illustrates the mean absolute error outcome measure. The black and red dotted lines show the peak force command and the timing of movement error, respectively.
Figure 2Summary of the results of the acquisition of motor skill (Day 1): (a), (c), and (e) show Control group averaged ankle angle (a), TA activity (c), and SOL activity (e) signals. (b), (d), and (f) present the same signals for the Pain group. The vertical dotted lines indicate the timing of the peak force command during the adaptation period. The shaded gray areas present each group baseline data (mean ± SEM). The gray lines illustrate the first stride (dashed line) and strides 2 to 11 (early adaptation; full line) of the adaptation period while the black line presents data during late adaptation (strides 151 to 200).
Figure 3Results for ankle kinematic outcome measures: (a) and (c) present Control (blue) and Pain (red) group averaged time course of the mean absolute error (a) and relative timing of error outcome measures (c) for each day. Gray areas highlight the strides used for the computation of early and late adaptation presented in (b) and (d) (mean ± SEM).
Post hoc analyses for the time × group interaction on the relative timing of error variable. Uncorrected p values are presented. According to the Benjamini-Hochberg procedure, the critical p value = α/m∗i, where m corresponds to the number of hypotheses tested (m = 4) and i corresponds to the rank of the tested hypothesis based on the uncorrected p value.
| Between groups | Within group | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Control versus Pain | Early versus late | ||
| Early adaptation |
| Control |
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| Late adaptation |
| Pain |
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aCritical p value = 0.05/4∗1 = 0.0125; bCritical p value = 0.05/4∗2 = 0.025.