Bagesteiro Leia B, Sainburg Robert L
Department of Kinesiology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2002 Nov;88(5):2408-21. doi: 10.1152/jn.00901.2001.
Recent findings from our laboratory suggest that a major factor distinguishing dominant from nondominant arm performance is the ability by which the effects of intersegmental dynamics are controlled by the CNS. These studies indicated that the dominant arm reliably used more torque-efficient patterns for movements made with similar speeds and accuracy than nondominant arm movements. Whereas, nondominant hand-path curvatures systematically varied with the amplitude of the interaction torques transferred between the segments of the moving limb, dominant hand-path curvatures did not. However, our previous studies did not distinguish whether dominant arm coordination advantages emerged from more effective control of dynamic factors or were simply a secondary effect of planning different kinematics. The purpose of this study was to further investigate interlimb differences in coordination through analysis of inverse dynamics and electromyography recorded during the performance of reaching movements. By controlling the amplitude of intersegmental dynamics in the current study, we were able to assess whether systematic differences in torque-efficiency exist, even when differences in hand-path shape were minimal. Subject's arms were supported in the horizontal plane by a frictionless air-jet system and were constrained to movements about the shoulder and elbow joints. Two targets were designed, such that the interaction torques elicited at the elbow were either large or small. Our results showed that the former produced large differences in hand-path curvature, whereas the latter did not. Additionally, the movements with small differences in hand-path kinematics showed substantial differences in torque patterns and corresponding EMG profiles which implied a more torque-efficient strategy for the dominant arm. In view of these findings we propose that distinct neural control mechanisms are employed for dominant and nondominant arm movements.
我们实验室最近的研究结果表明,区分优势手臂和非优势手臂运动表现的一个主要因素是中枢神经系统控制节段间动力学效应的能力。这些研究表明,在以相似速度和精度进行运动时,优势手臂比非优势手臂运动更可靠地使用扭矩效率更高的模式。然而,非优势手的路径曲率会随着运动肢体各节段之间传递的相互作用扭矩的幅度而系统地变化,而优势手的路径曲率则不会。然而,我们之前的研究没有区分优势手臂的协调优势是源于对动态因素更有效的控制,还是仅仅是规划不同运动学的次要效应。本研究的目的是通过分析在进行伸手动作时记录的逆动力学和肌电图,进一步研究肢体间的协调差异。通过在当前研究中控制节段间动力学的幅度,我们能够评估即使在手路径形状差异最小的情况下,扭矩效率是否存在系统差异。受试者的手臂由无摩擦喷气系统支撑在水平面上,并被限制在围绕肩关节和肘关节的运动中。设计了两个目标,使得在肘部产生的相互作用扭矩要么大要么小。我们的结果表明,前者会导致手路径曲率的巨大差异,而后者则不会。此外,在手路径运动学差异较小的运动中,扭矩模式和相应的肌电图谱存在显著差异,这意味着优势手臂采用了更具扭矩效率的策略。鉴于这些发现,我们提出优势手臂和非优势手臂运动采用了不同的神经控制机制。