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Vestibular and proprioceptive contributions to human balance corrections: aiding these with prosthetic feedback.

Authors :
Horlings CG
Carpenter MG
Honegger F
Allum JH
Source :
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences [Ann N Y Acad Sci] 2009 May; Vol. 1164, pp. 1-12.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Movement strategies controlling quiet stance and rapid balance corrections may have common characteristics. We investigated this assumption for lower leg proprioceptive loss (PL), peripheral vestibular loss (VL), and healthy controls. Our underlying hypothesis was that changes in movement-strategy modulation following sensory loss would improve with prosthetic biofeedback. Quiet stance was measured under different sensory conditions and compared to corrections induced by multidirection support-surface tilts. Response synergies were assessed using electromyography recordings from several muscles. Biofeedback of trunk sway during gait and stance tasks used lower trunk rotations to drive head-band-mounted vibro-tactile and auditory actuators. Strategies of quiet stance were different for roll and pitch, depending on sensory conditions. Simultaneously acting strategies were observed for low- and high-frequency sway. PL induced strategies different from those of VL and controls. VL strategies were identical to those of controls but with greater amplitudes. Tilt perturbation movement strategies were similar to high-frequency strategies of quiet stance--multisegmental. VL induced increased trunk pitch and roll responses with hypermetric trunk muscle responses and hypometric knee responses but unchanged synergies. Increasing PL up the legs caused changed synergies. Biofeedback reduced stance body sway in VL and elderly subjects. In conclusion, several movement strategies underlie quiet stance with high-frequency strategies being common to those of perturbed stance. PL changes both movement strategies and synergies, whereas VL only causes pathological changes to the modulation depth. Thus, VL is more easily rectified using trunk sway positional biofeedback.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1749-6632
Volume :
1164
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
19645874
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-6632.2009.03872.x