13 research outputs found

    Immature Spinal Locomotor Output in Children with Cerebral Palsy

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    Cappellini G, P. Ivanenko Y, Martino G, et al. Immature Spinal Locomotor Output in Children with Cerebral Palsy. Frontiers in Physiology. 2016;7:478

    Neuromechanical adjustments when walking with an aiding or hindering horizontal force

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    PURPOSE: Walking against a constant horizontal traction force which either hinders or aids the motion of the centre of mass of the body (COM) will create a discrepancy between the positive and negative work being done by the muscles and may thus affect the mechanics and energetics of walking. We aimed at investigating how this imbalance affects the exchange between potential and kinetic energy of the COM and how its dynamics is related to specific spatiotemporal organisation of motor pool activity in the spinal cord. To understand if and how the spinal cord activation may be associated with COM dynamics, we also compared the neuromechanical adjustments brought on by a horizontal force with published data about those brought on by a slope. METHODS: Ten subjects walked on a treadmill at different speeds with different traction forces. We recorded kinetics, kinematics, and electromyographic activity of 16 lower-limb muscles and assessed the spinal locomotor output by mapping them onto the rostrocaudal location of the motoneuron pools. RESULTS: When walking with a hindering force, the major part of the exchange between potential and kinetic energy of the COM occurs during the first part of stance, whereas with an aiding force exchanges increase during the second part of stance. Those changes occur since limb and trunk orientations remain aligned with the average orientation of the ground reaction force vector. Our results also show the sacral motor pools decreased their activity with an aiding force and increased with a hindering one, whereas the lumbar motor pools increased their engagement both with an aiding and a hindering force. CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that applying a constant horizontal force results in similar modifications of COM dynamics and spinal motor output to those observed when walking on slopes, consistent with common principles of motor pool functioning and biomechanics of locomotion

    Human Locomotion in Hypogravity: From Basic Research to Clinical Applications

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    We have considerable knowledge about the mechanisms underlying compensation of Earth gravity during locomotion, a knowledge obtained from physiological, biomechanical, modeling, developmental, comparative, and paleoanthropological studies. By contrast, we know much less about locomotion and movement in general under sustained hypogravity. This lack of information poses a serious problem for human space exploration. In a near future humans will walk again on the Moon and for the first time on Mars. It would be important to predict how they will move around, since we know that locomotion and mobility in general may be jeopardized in hypogravity, especially when landing after a prolonged weightlessness of the space flight. The combination of muscle weakness, of wearing a cumbersome spacesuit, and of maladaptive patterns of locomotion in hypogravity significantly increase the risk of falls and injuries. Much of what we currently know about locomotion in hypogravity derives from the video archives of the Apollo missions on the Moon, the experiments performed with parabolic flight or with body weight support on Earth, and the theoretical models. These are the topics of our review, along with the issue of the application of simulated hypogravity in rehabilitation to help patients with deambulation problems. We consider several issues that are common to the field of space science and clinical rehabilitation: the general principles governing locomotion in hypogravity, the methods used to reduce gravity effects on locomotion, the extent to which the resulting behavior is comparable across different methods, the important non-linearities of several locomotor parameters as a function of the gravity reduction, the need to use multiple methods to obtain reliable results, and the need to tailor the methods individually based on the physiology and medical history of each person

    Human locomotion in hypogravity: from basic research to clinical applications

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    Lacquaniti F, Ivanenko YP, Sylos Labini F, et al. Human locomotion in hypogravity: from basic research to clinical applications. Frontiers in Physiology. 2017;8:893

    Tonic and Rhythmic Spinal Activity Underlying Locomotion

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    Ivanenko YP, Gurfinkel VS, Selionov V, et al. Tonic and Rhythmic Spinal Activity Underlying Locomotion. Current Pharmaceutical Design. 2017;23(12):1753-1763

    Human Locomotion in Hypogravity: From Basic Research to Clinical Applications

    No full text
    We have considerable knowledge about the mechanisms underlying compensation of Earth gravity during locomotion, a knowledge obtained from physiological, biomechanical, modeling, developmental, comparative, and paleoanthropological studies. By contrast, we know much less about locomotion and movement in general under sustained hypogravity. This lack of information poses a serious problem for human space exploration. In a near future humans will walk again on the Moon and for the first time on Mars. It would be important to predict how they will move around, since we know that locomotion and mobility in general may be jeopardized in hypogravity, especially when landing after a prolonged weightlessness of the space flight. The combination of muscle weakness, of wearing a cumbersome spacesuit, and of maladaptive patterns of locomotion in hypogravity significantly increase the risk of falls and injuries. Much of what we currently know about locomotion in hypogravity derives from the video archives of the Apollo missions on the Moon, the experiments performed with parabolic flight or with body weight support on Earth, and the theoretical models. These are the topics of our review, along with the issue of the application of simulated hypogravity in rehabilitation to help patients with deambulation problems. We consider several issues that are common to the field of space science and clinical rehabilitation: the general principles governing locomotion in hypogravity, the methods used to reduce gravity effects on locomotion, the extent to which the resulting behavior is comparable across different methods, the important non-linearities of several locomotor parameters as a function of the gravity reduction, the need to use multiple methods to obtain reliable results, and the need to tailor the methods individually based on the physiology and medical history of each person

    Effects of paired transcutaneous electrical stimulation delivered at single and dual sites over lumbosacral spinal cord

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    It was demonstrated previously that transcutaneous electrical stimulation of multiple sites over the spinal cord is more effective in inducing robust locomotor behavior as compared to the stimulation of single sites alone in both animal and human models. To explore the effects and mechanisms of interactions during multi-site spinal cord stimulation we delivered transcutaneous electrical stimulation to the single or dual locations over the spinal cord corresponding to approximately L2 and S1 segments. Spinally evoked motor potentials in the leg muscles were investigated using single and paired pulses of 1 ms duration with conditioning-test intervals (CTIs) of 5 and 50 ms. We observed considerable post-stimulation modulatory effects which depended on CTIs, as well as on whether the paired stimuli were delivered at a single or dual locations, the rostro-caudal relation between the conditioning and test stimuli, and on the muscle studied. At CTI-5, the paired stimulation delivered at single locations (L2 or S1) provided strong inhibitory effects, evidenced by the attenuation of the compound responses as compared with responses from either single site. In contrast, during L2-S1 paradigm, the compound responses were potentiated. At CTI-50, the magnitude of inhibition did not differ among paired stimulation paradigms. Our results suggest that electrical stimuli delivered to dual sites over the lumbosacral enlargement in rostral-to-caudal order, may recruit different populations of motor neurons initially through projecting sensory and intraspinal connections and then directly, resulting in potentiation of the compound spinally evoked motor potentials. The interactive and synergistic effects indicate multi-segmental convergence of descending and ascending influences on the neuronal circuitries during electrical spinal cord stimulation
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