Kawashima Noritaka, Nozaki Daichi, Abe Masaki O, Akai Masami, Nakazawa Kimitaka
Department of Rehabilitation for Movement Functions, Research Institute of National Rehabilitation Center for Persons with Disabilities, 4-1 Namiki, Tokorozawa, Saitama 359-8555, Japan.
J Neurophysiol. 2005 Feb;93(2):777-85. doi: 10.1152/jn.00817.2004. Epub 2004 Sep 22.
It is now well recognized that muscle activity can be induced even in the paralyzed lower limb muscles of persons with spinal cord injury (SCI) by imposing locomotion-like movements on both of their legs. Although the significant role of the afferent input related to hip joint movement and body load has been emphasized considerably in previous studies, the contribution of the "alternate" leg movement pattern has not been fully investigated. This study was designed to investigate to what extent the alternate leg movement influenced this "locomotor-like" muscle activity. The knee-locked leg swing movement was imposed on 10 complete SCI subjects using a gait training apparatus. The following three different experimental conditions were adopted: 1) bilateral alternate leg movement, 2) unilateral leg movement, and 3) bilateral synchronous (in-phase) leg movement. In all experimental conditions, the passive leg movement induced EMG activity in the soleus and medial head of the gastrocnemius muscles in all SCI subjects and in the biceps femoris muscle in 8 of 10 SCI subjects. On the other hand, the EMG activity was not observed in the tibialis anterior and rectus femoris muscles. The EMG level of these activated muscles, as quantified by integrating the rectified EMG activity recorded from the right leg, was significantly larger for bilateral alternate leg movement than for unilateral and bilateral synchronous movements, although the right hip and ankle joint movements were identical in all experimental conditions. In addition, the difference in the pattern of the load applied to the leg among conditions was unable to explain the enhancement of EMG activity in the bilateral alternate leg movement condition. These results suggest that the sensory information generated by alternate leg movements plays a substantial role in amplifying the induced locomotor-like muscle activity in the lower limbs.
现在人们已经充分认识到,通过对脊髓损伤(SCI)患者的双腿施加类似行走的运动,即使是其瘫痪的下肢肌肉也能被诱导产生肌肉活动。尽管在先前的研究中已经相当强调了与髋关节运动和身体负荷相关的传入输入的重要作用,但“交替”腿部运动模式的贡献尚未得到充分研究。本研究旨在调查交替腿部运动在多大程度上影响这种“类似行走”的肌肉活动。使用步态训练设备对10名完全性SCI受试者施加膝盖锁定的腿部摆动运动。采用了以下三种不同的实验条件:1)双侧交替腿部运动,2)单侧腿部运动,3)双侧同步(同相)腿部运动。在所有实验条件下,被动腿部运动在所有SCI受试者的比目鱼肌和腓肠肌内侧头以及10名SCI受试者中的8名的股二头肌中诱导出肌电图(EMG)活动。另一方面,在胫前肌和股直肌中未观察到EMG活动。通过对从右腿记录的整流EMG活动进行积分来量化这些激活肌肉的EMG水平,尽管在所有实验条件下右髋和踝关节运动相同,但双侧交替腿部运动的EMG水平明显高于单侧和双侧同步运动。此外,不同条件下施加在腿部的负荷模式差异无法解释双侧交替腿部运动条件下EMG活动的增强。这些结果表明,交替腿部运动产生的感觉信息在放大下肢诱导的类似行走的肌肉活动中起着重要作用。