| Literature DB >> 34531519 |
Hikaru Yokoyama1,2,3, Tatsuya Kato2,3, Naotsugu Kaneko2,3, Hirofumi Kobayashi3, Motonori Hoshino4, Takanori Kokubun5, Kimitaka Nakazawa6.
Abstract
Underwater walking is one of the most common hydrotherapeutic exercises. Therefore, understanding muscular control during underwater walking is important for optimizing training regimens. The effects of the water environment on walking are mainly related to the hydrostatic and hydrodynamic theories of buoyancy and drag force. To date, muscular control during underwater walking has been investigated at the individual muscle level. However, it is recognized that the human nervous system modularly controls multiple muscles through muscle synergies, which are sets of muscles that work together. We found that the same set of muscle synergies was shared between the two walking tasks. However, some task-dependent modulation was found in the activation combination across muscles and temporal activation patterns of the muscle synergies. The results suggest that the human nervous system modulates activation of lower-limb muscles during water walking by finely tuning basic locomotor muscle synergies that are used during land walking to meet the biomechanical requirements for walking in the water environment.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34531519 PMCID: PMC8446023 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-98022-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic example of EMG reconstruction by the sum of activations of muscle synergies. The output of each muscle synergy (areas filled with blue or red in the right panel) is explained by the product of the muscle synergy (bars in the left panels; the activation level of each muscle) and the corresponding temporal activation coefficient (lines in the middle panels). Consequently, the total muscle activation (black lines in the right panel) is reconstructed by the sum of the muscle synergy activations (filled areas).
Figure 2Experimental setup. (A) Lateral view of a participant walking in water condition. Participants walked on an underwater treadmill. (B) Waterproof electromyographic electrodes used in the present study. The waterproof electrodes were covered with waterproof adhesive sheets to prevent water immersion. (C) Force sensors (foot switches) were waterproofed with silicone coating.
Figure 3Examples of electromyographic (EMG) signals during land walking (A) and water walking (B) from a participant. EMG signals were recorded from ten muscles of the right leg. Vertical red dashed lines indicate right foot-contact timings.
Figure 4Group means with standard errors (SE) of muscle activation patterns during land walking (red) and water walking (blue). Red and blue rectangles under the plots indicate timing at which a significant difference existed between the two tasks (p < 0.05). Red rectangles mean that the activation was greater in land-walking compared to that in water-walking. Blue rectangles mean that it was greater in water-walking than land-walking. Group means with standard deviations (SD) of the correlation coefficients between the two tasks are shown above the plots.
Figure 5Individual (thin lines) and participant mean (thick lines) of the percentage of Variability Accounted For (VAF). Left and right panels indicate VAF for land-walking and water walking, respectively. Horizontal dashed lines indicate the threshold to determine the number of extracted muscle synergies.
Figure 6Construction of muscle synergies (weightings for muscles) (A) and their temporal activation patterns (B). (A) Bar plots indicate participant mean and standard error (SE) of the weightings of each muscle. Asterisks associated with certain muscles indicate significant differences in the weightings between the two tasks (p < 0.05). Correlation coefficients between the two tasks are shown above the bar plots. (B) Line plots indicate participant mean and SE of the temporal patterns of muscle synergies. Red rectangles under the line plots indicate timing when activation during land-walking was significantly larger than that during water-walking (p < 0.05). Correlation coefficients between the two tasks are shown above the plots.