Bunderson Nathan E, Burkholder Thomas J, Ting Lena H
The Wallace H Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Tech and Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322-0535, USA.
J Biomech. 2008;41(7):1537-44. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2008.02.004. Epub 2008 Apr 18.
Postural control requires the coordination of multiple muscles to achieve both endpoint force production and postural stability. Multiple muscle activation patterns can produce the required force for standing, but the mechanical stability associated with any given pattern may vary, and has implications for the degree of delayed neural feedback necessary for postural stability. We hypothesized that muscular redundancy is reduced when muscle activation patterns are chosen with respect to intrinsic musculoskeletal stability as well as endpoint force production. We used a three-dimensional musculoskeletal model of the cat hindlimb with 31 muscles to determine the possible contributions of intrinsic muscle properties to limb stability during isometric force generation. Using dynamic stability analysis we demonstrate that within the large set of activation patterns that satisfy the force requirement for posture, only a reduced subset produce a mechanically stable limb configuration. Greater stability in the frontal-plane suggests that neural control mechanisms are more highly active for sagittal-plane and for ankle joint control. Even when the limb was unstable, the time-constants of instability were sufficiently great to allow long-latency neural feedback mechanisms to intervene, which may be preferential for movements requiring maneuverability versus stability. Local joint stiffness of muscles was determined by the stabilizing or destabilizing effects of moment-arm versus joint angle relationships. By preferentially activating muscles with high local stiffness, muscle activation patterns with feedforward stabilizing properties could be selected. Such a strategy may increase intrinsic postural stability without co-contraction, and may be useful criteria in the force-sharing problem.
姿势控制需要多块肌肉协同作用,以实现端点力的产生和姿势稳定性。多种肌肉激活模式可产生站立所需的力,但与任何给定模式相关的机械稳定性可能会有所不同,这对姿势稳定性所需的延迟神经反馈程度具有影响。我们假设,当根据内在肌肉骨骼稳定性以及端点力产生来选择肌肉激活模式时,肌肉冗余会减少。我们使用了一个具有31块肌肉的猫后肢三维肌肉骨骼模型,来确定等长力产生过程中内在肌肉特性对肢体稳定性的可能贡献。通过动态稳定性分析,我们证明,在满足姿势力需求的大量激活模式中,只有一小部分能产生机械稳定的肢体构型。额平面上更高的稳定性表明,神经控制机制在矢状平面和踝关节控制方面更为活跃。即使肢体不稳定,不稳定的时间常数也足够大,足以让长潜伏期神经反馈机制进行干预,这对于需要机动性而非稳定性的运动可能更为有利。肌肉的局部关节刚度由力臂与关节角度关系的稳定或不稳定作用决定。通过优先激活具有高局部刚度的肌肉,可以选择具有前馈稳定特性的肌肉激活模式。这种策略可能会在不进行共同收缩的情况下提高内在姿势稳定性,并且可能是力分配问题中的有用标准。