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Muscle synergy structure and gait patterns in children with spastic cerebral palsy

Authors :
Kaat Desloovere
Eirini Papageorgiou
Guy Molenaers
Katherine M. Steele
Marije Goudriaan
Benjamin R. Shuman
Nadia Dominici
Anja Van Campenhout
Els Ortibus
Coordination Dynamics
AMS - Rehabilitation & Development
IBBA
Source :
Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, Goudriaan, M, Papageorgiou, E, Shuman, B R, Steele, K M, Dominici, N, Van Campenhout, A, Ortibus, E, Molenaers, G & Desloovere, K 2022, ' Muscle synergy structure and gait patterns in children with spastic cerebral palsy ', Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology, vol. 64, no. 4, pp. 462-468 . https://doi.org/10.1111/dmcn.15068, Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology, 64(4), 462-468. Wiley-Blackwell
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

AIM: To determine if muscle synergy structure (activations and weights) differs between gait patterns in children with spastic cerebral palsy (CP). METHOD: In this cross-sectional study, we classified 188 children with unilateral (n=82) or bilateral (n=106) spastic CP (mean age: 9y 5mo, SD: 4y 3mo, range: 3y 9mo-17y 7mo; 75 females; Gross Motor Function Classification System [GMFCS] level I: 106, GMFCS level II: 55, GMFCS level III: 27) into a minor deviations (n=34), drop foot (n=16), genu recurvatum (n=26), apparent equinus (n=53), crouch (n=39), and jump gait pattern (n=20). Surface electromyography recordings from eight lower limb muscles of the most affected side were used to calculate synergies with weighted non-negative matrix factorization. We compared synergy activations and weights between the patterns. RESULTS: Synergy structure was similar between gait patterns, although weights differed in the more impaired children (crouch and jump gait) when compared to the other patterns. Variability in synergy structure between participants was high. INTERPRETATION: The similarity in synergy structure between gait patterns suggests a generic motor control strategy to compensate for the brain lesion. However, the differences in weights and high variability between participants indicate that this generic motor control strategy might be individualized and dependent on impairment level. ispartof: DEVELOPMENTAL MEDICINE AND CHILD NEUROLOGY vol:64 issue:4 pages:462-468 ispartof: location:England status: published

Details

ISSN :
14698749 and 00121622
Volume :
64
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Developmental medicine and child neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....39291bc49ddc188306ae3e487d77c81c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/dmcn.15068