| Literature DB >> 28713252 |
Yi-Tzu Chang1,2, Ling-Fu Meng2,3, Chun-Ju Chang4,5, Po-Liang Lai6, Chi-Wen Lung7, Jen-Suh Chern8.
Abstract
Subjective visual vertical (SVV) judgment and standing stability were separately investigated among patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS). Although, one study has investigated the central mechanism of stability control in the AIS population, the relationships between SVV, decreased standing stability, and AIS have never been investigated. Through event-related potentials (ERPs), the present study examined the effect of postural control demands (PDs) on AIS central mechanisms related to SVV judgment and standing stability to elucidate the time-serial stability control process. Thirteen AIS subjects (AIS group) and 13 age-matched adolescents (control group) aged 12-18 years were recruited. Each subject had to complete an SVV task (i.e., the modified rod-and-frame [mRAF] test) as a stimulus, with online electroencephalogram recording being performed in the following three standing postures: feet shoulder-width apart standing, feet together standing, and tandem standing. The behavioral performance in terms of postural stability (center of pressure excursion), SVV (accuracy and reaction time), and mRAF-locked ERPs (mean amplitude and peak latency of the P1, N1, and P2 components) was then compared between the AIS and control groups. In the behavioral domain, the results revealed that only the AIS group demonstrated a significantly accelerated SVV reaction time as the PDs increased. In the cerebral domain, significantly larger P2 mean amplitudes were observed during both feet shoulder-width-apart standing and feet together standing postures compared with during tandem standing. No group differences were noted in the cerebral domain. The results indicated that (1) during the dual-task paradigm, a differential behavioral strategy of accelerated SVV reaction time was observed in the AIS group only when the PDs increased and (2) the decrease in P2 mean amplitudes with the increase in the PD levels might be direct evidence of the competition for central processing attentional resources under the dual-task postural control paradigm.Entities:
Keywords: adolescent idiopathic scoliosis; event-related potentials; postural control; postural stability; subjective visual vertical
Year: 2017 PMID: 28713252 PMCID: PMC5492482 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2017.00326
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1Examples of stimuli used during the mRAF test.
Average Cobb angle of the thoracic or thoracolumbar spine in the AIS group.
| Thoracic spine | 17.88° ± 8.29° | 15.5° ± 5.80° | 18.67° ± 9.05° |
| Thoracic-lumbar spine | 25.18° ± 9.44° | 25.25° ± 9.82° | 25.00° ± 10.39° |
Cobb angle (L): direction of apex toward the left side of the body.
Cobb angle (R): direction of apex toward the right side of the body.
Behavioral performance comparisons between the AIS and the control group.
| 21.80 ± 5.92 | 22.63 ± 9.10 | 0.79 | 73 ± 18 | 77 ± 10 | 0.47 | 734.23 ± 163.96 | 630.82 ± 98.15 | 0.06 | |
| 47.53 ± 23.03 | 49.07 ± 15.95 | 0.84 | 76 ± 16 | 78 ± 10 | 0.75 | 638.10 ± 140.24 | 630.72 ± 126.80 | 0.89 | |
| 145.22 ± 48.71 | 159.65 ± 69.84 | 0.55 | 79 ± 15 | 79 ± 09 | 0.96 | 579.40 ± 119.45 | 617.18 ± 118.52 | 0.43 | |
| 0.00** | 0.00** | 0.19 | 0.11 | 0.00** | 0.89 | ||||
D1: feet shoulder-width apart, D2: feet together, D3: tandem stance.
p.
Values are expressed as mean ± SD. For CoP excursion, both the AIS and control groups demonstrated the largest excursion in the tandem stance, followed by the feet together stance, and the smallest excursion in the feet shoulder-width apart stance. For SVV accuracy, both the AIS and control groups demonstrated equivalent SVV accuracy, regardless of the standing posture. For SVV reaction time (RT), the AIS group demonstrated the quickest RT in the tandem stance, followed by the feet together stance, and slowest RT in the feet shoulder-width apart stance. The control group demonstrated equivalent RTs, regardless of the standing posture.
Figure 2Grand average waveforms in the AIS group (A) and the control group (B) during different standing postures at various electrode sites.
Figure 3Grand average topographies in the AIS group and the control group (View from top).
Mean amplitudes and mean peak latencies of the P1, N1, and P2 components in the AIS control group.
| D1 | 5.15 ± 3.17 | 4.95 ± 2.87 | 143.56 ± 17.22 | 151.67 ± 13.98 |
| D2 | 4.98 ± 3.06 | 5.01 ± 3.26 | 149.72 ± 18.85 | 150.36 ± 17.24 |
| D3 | 4.63 ± 3.37 | 5.14 ± 2.90 | 143.40 ± 15.58 | 149.72 ± 13.41 |
| D1 | −2.52 ± 1.73 | −1.52 ± 2.08 | 156.71 ± 10.60 | 147.89 ± 13.03 |
| D2 | −2.19 ± 2.29 | −2.02 ± 2.19 | 154.26 ± 11.60 | 151.22 ± 14.05 |
| D3 | −3.10 ± 2.09 | −2.51 ± 2.56 | 157.28 ± 11.24 | 154.94 ± 12.22 |
| D1 | 6.57 ± 3.67 | 6.36 ± 3.67 | 244.15 ± 17.67 | 250.10 ± 15.88 |
| D2 | 5.80 ± 2.92 | 5.75 ± 3.61 | 236.54 ± 20.28 | 246.18 ± 15.02 |
| D3 | 4.07 ± 2.90 | 4.40 ± 3.15 | 238.64 ± 23.67 | 242.44 ± 17.54 |
D1: feet shoulder-width apart, D2: feet together, D3: tandem stance.
Values are expressed as mean ± SD. The mean amplitudes and peak latencies are the average of mean amplitudes and peak latencies of O1, OZ, and O2 electrodes for the P1 component; F3, FZ, F4, FCZ, and CZ electrodes for the N1 component; and P3, PZ, and P4 electrodes for the P2 component. Significance was only reported for the main effect of posture for the mean amplitudes of the P2 component (F = 14.39, p < 0.01). Subsequent post-hoc Bonferroni analysis indicated that both D1 and D2 postures demonstrated significantly larger P2 mean amplitudes than D3 did. None of the rest results revealed any interaction effect or main effects of posture or group.