| Literature DB >> 31473806 |
Mohsen Shafizadeh1, Ali Sharifnezhad2, Jonathan Wheat3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The aim of the current meta-analysis was to examine the extent to which there are differences in upper extremity motor synergies across different age groups in manipulative tasks.Entities:
Keywords: Ageing; Grasping; Reaching; Synergy
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31473806 PMCID: PMC6763531 DOI: 10.1007/s00421-019-04216-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Appl Physiol ISSN: 1439-6319 Impact factor: 3.078
Fig. 1Flow diagram of selection of studies focusing on motor synergies in upper limbs
The main characteristics of participants, synergy models and task
| Studies | Quality score | Adults | Older adults | Types of synergy | Synergy model | Task |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dutta et al ( | 6 | Male and female ( | Male and female ( | Multi-joint kinematic | UCM model included a 10 Dofs elemental variable (clavicle, shoulder, elbow and wrist) and one performance variable (hand position); | Reaching and aiming to a target on a touch screen; fast and accurate; no reaction time requirement; right/left hands under certain and uncertain target conditions; 120 trials per condition; |
| Gorniak et al ( | 9 | Male and female ( | Male and female ( | Multi-finger force kinetic | UCM model included force variability among four fingers (elemental variable) to stablise a performance variable (grip force); Δ | Moving a handle to a visual target by applying fingers grip forces; subjects were instructed to move the handle quickly and accurately 0.30 m vertically to the visual target; 15 trials were completed |
| Kapur et al ( | 9 | Male and female ( | Male and female ( | Multi-finger force kinetic | UCM model included force variability among four fingers (elemental variable) to stablise a performance variable (total force); | Finger pressing task in 4-fingers and 1-finger conditions; pressing the fingers in different directions (downward, backward, downward-left); online feedback from the force magnitude (MVC%); 15 trials in Four-finger pressing and 3 trials in 1-finger pressing; |
| Kruger et al. ( | 6 | Male and female ( | Male and female ( | Multi-joint Kinematic | UCM model included a 7Dofs elemental variable (shoulder, elbow and wrist) and one performance variable (hand position); | Reaching and grasping an object; fast and accurate; no reaction time requirement; target location was changed (L/R/M); 120 trials |
| Olafsdottir et al. ( | 8 | Male and female ( | Male and female ( | Multi-finger force kinetic | UCM model included force variability among four fingers (elemental variable) to stablise a performance variable (total force); Δ | The subjects were asked to produce a ramp pattern of force from 0–25% of MVC over 5 s by pressing down with four fingers; young participants performed 25 trials and old participants performed 20 trials |
| Olafsdo et al. ( | 8 | Male and female ( | Male and female ( | Multi-finger force kinetic | UCM model included force variability among four fingers (elemental variable) to stablise a performance variable (total force); Δ | The subjects were asked to produce a ramp pattern of force from 0–10% of MVC over 5 s by pressing down with four fingers under reaction time and self-paced conditions; young participants performed 15 trials and old participants performed 20 trials; |
| Park et al. ( | 8 | Male and female ( | Male and female ( | Multi-finger force kinetic | UCM model included force variability among four fingers (elemental variable) to stablise a performance variable (total force); | Participants were instructed to press down four fingers and produce a specific total force (MVC%); 20 trials were completed |
| Park et al. ( | 6 | Male and female ( | Male and female ( | Multi-finger force kinetic | UCM model included force variability among two fingers (elemental variable) to stablise a performance variable (total force); | Participants were asked to produce a specific target force with 2 fingers under mechanical constraint and normal conditions; 10 trials per condition were completed; |
| Shim et al. ( | 8 | Male and female ( | Male and female ( | Multi-finger force kinetic | UCM model included force variability among four fingers (elemental variable) to stablise a performance variable (total force); | Participants were instructed to track a line by producing a specific force (20MVC%) by pressing four fingers within 6 s; 20 trials were completed |
| Shinohara et al ( | 8 | Male and female ( | Male and female ( | Multi-finger force kinetic | UCM model included force variability among four fingers (elemental variable) to stablise a performance variable (total force); Δ | Participants were instructed to reach a target force (30 MVC%) with pressing four fingers; 12 trials were completed |
| Singh et al ( | 6 | Male and female ( | Male and female ( | Multi-finger force kinetic | UCM model included force variability among four fingers (elemental variable) to stablise a performance variable (total force); | Participants were instructed to reach a target force (40MVC%) by pressing four fingers; 2 trials were completed |
| Skm et al ( | 7 | Male and female ( | Male and female ( | Multi-finger force kinetic | UCM model included force variability among four fingers (elemental variable) to stablise a performance variable (total force); Δ | Participants were required to rotate a handle from neutral to a target position (30 degrees) in slow and fast speed; 24 trials were completed; |
| Solnik et al. ( | 8 | Male and female ( | Male and female ( | Multi-finger force kinetic | UCM model included internal force variability among four fingers (elemental variable) to stablise a performance variable (total force); Normal force, Tangential foce and ratio were | Participants were given a handle to hold with finger tips in air and vertical to the floor for 3 s; different types of grip were used; 36 trials were completed |
| Verrel et al. ( | 9 | Male and female ( | Male and female ( | Multi-joint kinematic | UCM model included a 11 Dofs elemental variable (clavicle, shoulder, elbow, wrist and fingers) and one performance variable (finger tip position); GEV , NGEV and UCM index were reported | Participants had to point targets with the right index finger; no reaction time requirement; targets were mounted on a stand (Up/Low); 3 practice conditions (blocked/alternating/random); 40 trials per condition were completed |
| Wu et al. ( | 7 | Male and female ( | Male and female ( | Multi-finger force kinetic | UCM model included internal force variability among four fingers (elemental variable) to stablise a performance variable (total force); | Participants were instructed to reach a target force (40 MVC%) by pressing four fingers to match a target force template; 12 trials were completed |
| Xu et al. ( | 8 | Female healthy ( | Female healthy ( | Multi-joint kinematic | UCM model included a 7 Dofs elemental variable (shoulder, elbow and wrist) and one performance variable (hand position); | A simulated assembly task was used that required reach, grasp and release movements; 4 sessions (20 min each) were completed |
Fig. 2Forest plot comparing the motor synergies index between young and older adults in kinetics synergies and kinematics synergies tasks
Fig. 3Forest plot comparing the motor synergies index between young and older adults in kinetics synergies and kinematics synergies tasks based on the measurement units. ΔV for kinetics and ratio for kinematics (top) and ΔVz for both kinetics and kinematics (bottom)
Fig. 4Forest plot comparing the GEV between young and older adults in kinetics synergies and kinematics synergies tasks
Fig. 5Forest plot comparing the NGEV between young and older adults in kinetics synergies and kinematics synergies tasks