Michaelsen Stella M, Jacobs Stéphane, Roby-Brami Agnès, Levin Mindy F
School of Rehabilitation, University of Montreal Research Centre, Rehabilitation Institute of Montreal, 6300 Darlington, H3S 2J4, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Exp Brain Res. 2004 Jul;157(2):162-73. doi: 10.1007/s00221-004-1829-x. Epub 2004 Feb 19.
Previous studies have shown that patients with arm and hand paresis following stroke recruit an additional degree of freedom (the trunk) to transport the hand during reaching and use alternative strategies for grasping. The few studies of grasping parameters of the impaired hand have been case studies mainly focusing on describing grasping in the presence of particular impairments such as hemi-neglect or optic ataxia and have not focussed on the role of the trunk in prehension. We hypothesized that the trunk movement not only ensures the transport of the hand to the object, but it also assists in orienting the hand for grasping when distal deficits are present. Nineteen patients with chronic hemiparesis and seven healthy subjects participated in the study. Patients had sustained a stroke of non-traumatic origin 6-82 months previously (31+/-22 months) and had mild or moderate to severe arm paresis. Using a whole hand grasp, subjects reached and grasped a cylinder (35 mm) that was placed sagittally (T1) or at a 45 degrees angle to the sagittal midline in the ipsilateral workspace (T2), both at about 90% arm's length (10 trials per target). Eight infrared emitting diodes were placed on bony landmarks of the hand, arm and trunk and kinematic data were recorded by an optical motion analysis system (Optotrak) for 2-5 s at 120 Hz. Hand position and orientation were recorded by a Fastrack Polhemus system. Our results show that during goal-directed prehension tasks, individuals with hemiparesis oriented the hand more frontally for grasping and used more trunk anterior displacement or rotation to transport the hand to the target compared to healthy subjects. Despite these changes, the major characteristics of reaching and grasping such as grip aperture size, temporal coordination between hand transport and aperture formation and the relative timing of grip aperture were largely preserved. For patients with more severe distal impairments, the amount of trunk displacement was also correlated with a more frontal hand orientation for grasping. Furthermore, in healthy subjects and patients without distal impairments, the trunk movement was mostly related to proximal arm movements while in those with distal impairments, trunk movement was related to both proximal and distal arm movements. Data support the hypothesis that the trunk movement is used to assist both arm transport and hand orientation for grasping when distal deficits are present.
以往研究表明,中风后出现手臂和手部轻瘫的患者在伸手够物时会额外动用一个自由度(即躯干)来移动手部,并采用其他抓握策略。少数关于患侧手抓握参数的研究主要是案例分析,主要侧重于描述在存在诸如半侧空间忽视或视觉性共济失调等特定损伤情况下的抓握情况,而未关注躯干在抓握动作中的作用。我们推测,躯干运动不仅能确保手部向物体移动,而且当存在远端功能障碍时,它还能辅助手部进行抓握定向。19例慢性偏瘫患者和7名健康受试者参与了本研究。患者在6 - 82个月前(平均31±22个月)发生了非创伤性中风,存在轻度或中度至重度手臂轻瘫。受试者采用全手抓握方式,伸手去抓握一个放置在矢状面(T1)或与同侧工作空间矢状中线呈45度角(T2)的圆柱体(35毫米),两者均位于手臂长度约90%处(每个目标进行10次试验)。在手部、手臂和躯干的骨性标志上放置8个红外发光二极管,通过光学运动分析系统(Optotrak)以120赫兹的频率记录2 - 5秒的运动学数据。手部位置和方向由Fastrack Polhemus系统记录。我们的结果表明,在目标导向的抓握任务中,与健康受试者相比,偏瘫患者抓握时手部更偏向额状面,并且在将手部移动到目标位置时更多地利用躯干向前位移或旋转。尽管有这些变化,但伸手和抓握的主要特征,如抓握孔径大小、手部移动与孔径形成之间的时间协调性以及抓握孔径的相对时间,在很大程度上得以保留。对于远端损伤更严重的患者,躯干位移量也与抓握时手部更偏向额状面相关。此外,在健康受试者和无远端损伤的患者中,躯干运动主要与近端手臂运动相关,而在有远端损伤的患者中,躯干运动与近端和远端手臂运动均相关。数据支持这样的假设,即当存在远端功能障碍时,躯干运动可用于辅助手臂移动和手部抓握定向。