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Impact of spinal manipulation on cortical drive to upper and lower limb muscles

Authors :
Türker, Kemal Sıtkı (ORCID 0000-0001-9962-075X & YÖK ID 6741)
Haavik Heidi; Niazi, Imran Khan; Jochumsen, Mads; Sherwin, Diane; Flavel, Stanley
School of Medicine
Türker, Kemal Sıtkı (ORCID 0000-0001-9962-075X & YÖK ID 6741)
Haavik Heidi; Niazi, Imran Khan; Jochumsen, Mads; Sherwin, Diane; Flavel, Stanley
School of Medicine
Source :
Brain Sciences
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

This study investigates whether spinal manipulation leads to changes in motor control by measuring the recruitment pattern of motor units in both an upper and lower limb muscle and to see whether such changes may at least in part occur at the cortical level by recording movement related cortical potential (MRCP) amplitudes. In experiment one, transcranial magnetic stimulation input-output (TMS I/O) curves for an upper limb muscle (abductor pollicus brevis; APB) were recorded, along with F waves before and after either spinal manipulation or a control intervention for the same subjects on two different days. During two separate days, lower limb TMS I/O curves and MRCPs were recorded from tibialis anterior muscle (TA) pre and post spinal manipulation. Dependent measures were compared with repeated measures analysis of variance, with p set at 0.05. Spinal manipulation resulted in a 54.5% +/- 93.1% increase in maximum motor evoked potential (MEPmax) for APB and a 44.6% +/- 69.6% increase in MEPmax for TA. For the MRCP data following spinal manipulation there were significant difference for amplitude of early bereitschafts-potential (EBP), late bereitschafts potential (LBP) and also for peak negativity (PN). The results of this study show that spinal manipulation leads to changes in cortical excitability, as measured by significantly larger MEPmax for TMS induced input-output curves for both an upper and lower limb muscle, and with larger amplitudes of MRCP component post manipulation. No changes in spinal measures (i.e., F wave amplitudes or persistence) were observed, and no changes were shown following the control condition. These results are consistent with previous findings that have suggested increases in strength following spinal manipulation were due to descending cortical drive and could not be explained by changes at the level of the spinal cord. Spinal manipulation may therefore be indicated for the patients who have lost tonus of their muscle and/or are recov<br />Australian Spinal Research Foundation; Hamblin Chiropractic Research Fund Trust; New Zealand College of Chiropractic; Koç University

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Brain Sciences
Notes :
pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1200729266
Document Type :
Electronic Resource