| Literature DB >> 34175891 |
Laura A Prosser1,2, Maria Ovando Aguirre3, Susan Zhao3, Daniel K Bogen3, Samuel R Pierce4, Kathleen A Nilan5, Huayan Zhang5,6, Frances S Shofer7, Michelle J Johnson3,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Early detection of delay or impairment in motor function is important to guide clinical management and inform prognosis during a critical window for the development of motor control in children. The purpose of this study was to investigate the ability of biomechanical measures of early postural control to distinguish infants with future impairment in motor control from their typically developing peers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34175891 PMCID: PMC8710181 DOI: 10.1038/s41390-021-01617-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Res ISSN: 0031-3998 Impact factor: 3.756
Fig. 1An infant lying supine in the toy gym during the recording of center of pressure (COP).
a Side view of the infant playing with the hanging elephant toy; b aerial view of the infant in the no toy condition; c aerial view of the infant in the orangutan toy condition, designed to encourage bilateral reaching.
Fig. 2Postural control data processing.
a Schematic of infant lying supine on the instrumented mat. b Example raw data. The Green load cell was wired to be the minimum Y value, and the Yellow load cell as the maximum Y value. The Red load cell relates to X-min., and the Blue as X-max. We hardcode these bounds to be 104 × 104 cm, the measured length along the edges from one load cell to the other. c Representative stabilogram with the raw data calibrated to real-world coordinates and filtered. The data were translated and rotated so the green corner was positioned at (0,0). Actual values for ellipse area and excursions in X and Y are listed.
Postural control variables, derived from center of pressure time series data.
| Measure | Operational definition | Unit of measure |
|---|---|---|
| RMS | The root mean square of the norm (Euclidean distance) of the COP vectors; the sum of deviations from the mean COP | cm |
| ExcursionX | The farthest distance (magnitude) in the real-world | cm |
| ExcursionY | The farthest distance (magnitude) in the real-world | cm |
| StdDevX | Standard deviation of the COPx values | cm |
| StdDevY | Standard deviation of the COPy values | cm |
| PathLength | The total path length distance calculated, time normalized to 1 min | cm |
| EllipseArea | The area of an ellipse fit to the data, such that 95% of the data points are captured in the ellipse area | cm2 |
Demographic characteristics of participant sample.
| Group by birth status | Sex | Mean age in months (corrected for preterm birth in the Preterm group, range) | Mean weight in kg (range) | Outcome at 2 years |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full term ( | 3 males, 5 females | 4.8 (4.0–6.5) | 6.7 (5.5–8.2) | Typical motor control ( |
| Preterm ( | 5 males, 2 females | 3.5 (1.0–5.5) | 6.1 (4.1–8.6) | Typical motor control ( |
Fig. 3Group differences in postural control.
Group data for Path Length (a, b) and Standard Deviation in Y (StdDevY; c, d) for all toy conditions combined and individually. Group comparisons for Full Term vs. Preterm birth are on the left. Group comparisons for future Typical vs. Impaired motor control are on the right. Group differences were considered significant if p < 0.05 and are indicated by asterisk (*) following the condition name. Path length distinguished between groups by birth status and by later motor control for most toy conditions, with the Preterm and Impaired motor control groups having higher path length than the Full Term and Typical motor control groups, respectively. StdDevY distinguished between groups by birth status in the no toy and lion (kicking toy) conditions, with the Preterm group having lower variability in COPy than the Full Term group. Similar differences were observed when grouped by later motor control, but these differences did not reach significance (perhaps due to low statistical power as a result of the small sample size in the Impaired motor control group).
Group comparisons for postural control variables in the no toy condition.
| Birth status | Motor control outcome | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full term ( | Preterm ( | Typical ( | Impaired ( | |||
| RMS (cm) | 7.033 (3.527) | 3.598 (1.550) | 0.346 | 6.429 (3.377) | 3.540 (2.060) | 0.703 |
| ExcursionX (cm) | 10.600 (5.687) | 10.643 (4.178) | >0.999 | 10.577 (5.098) | 9.085 (3.858) | >0.999 |
| ExcursionY (cm) | 10.690 (3.396) | 5.960 (3.412) | 0.436 | 9.615 (3.894) | 4.512 (0.555) | 0.353 |
| StdDevX (cm) | 1.510 (0.872) | 1.193 (0.698) | 0.999 | 1.393 (0.815) | 1.207 (0.902) | >0.999 |
| StdDevY (cm) | 1.863 (0.920) | 0.799 (0.502) | 0.048* | 1.692 (0.944) | 0.618 (0.303) | 0.096 |
| PathLength per minute (cm) | 101.3 (40.4) | 153.4 (53.3) | 0.005* | 114.9 (55.5) | 155.6 (15.4) | 0.033* |
| EllipseArea (log10) | 3.117 (1.230) | 2.615 (1.258) | 0.743 | 2.994 (1.229) | 2.395 (1.234) | 0.610 |
Values are groups means (SDs). Ellipse area data were log transformed for analysis to accommodate for skewness. p Values were adjusted for multiple comparisons using Tukey-Kramer tests and statistical difference between groups is indicated by asterisk (*) (p < 0.05).