School of Biological and Health Systems Engineering, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2011;6(11):e27715. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0027715. Epub 2011 Nov 16.
The delicate tuning of digit forces to object properties can be disrupted by a number of neurological and musculoskeletal diseases. One such condition is Carpal Tunnel Syndrome (CTS), a compression neuropathy of the median nerve that causes sensory and motor deficits in a subset of digits in the hand. Whereas the effects of CTS on median nerve physiology are well understood, the extent to which it affects whole-hand manipulation remains to be addressed. CTS affects only the lateral three and a half digits, which raises the question of how the central nervous system integrates sensory feedback from affected and unaffected digits to plan and execute whole-hand object manipulation. We addressed this question by asking CTS patients and healthy controls to grasp, lift, and hold a grip device (445, 545, or 745 g) for several consecutive trials. We found that CTS patients were able to successfully adapt grip force to object weight. However, multi-digit force coordination in patients was characterized by lower discrimination of force modulation to lighter object weights, higher across-trial digit force variability, the consistent use of excessively large digit forces across consecutive trials, and a lower ability to minimize net moments on the object. Importantly, the mechanical requirement of attaining equilibrium of forces and torques caused CTS patients to exert excessive forces at both CTS-affected digits and digits with intact sensorimotor capabilities. These findings suggest that CTS-induced deficits in tactile sensitivity interfere with the formation of accurate sensorimotor memories of previous manipulations. Consequently, CTS patients use compensatory strategies to maximize grasp stability at the expense of exerting consistently larger multi-digit forces than controls. These behavioral deficits might be particularly detrimental for tasks that require fine regulation of fingertip forces for manipulating light or fragile objects.
对物体属性的数字力的精细调节可能会受到许多神经和肌肉骨骼疾病的干扰。腕管综合征 (CTS) 就是这样一种疾病,它是正中神经的一种压迫性神经病,在手的一部分手指中引起感觉和运动功能障碍。虽然 CTS 对正中神经生理的影响已经得到很好的理解,但它对整个手部操作的影响仍有待解决。CTS 仅影响外侧三个半手指,这就提出了一个问题,即中枢神经系统如何整合受影响和未受影响手指的感觉反馈,以规划和执行整个手部物体操作。我们通过要求 CTS 患者和健康对照者连续多次抓握、提起和握住一个握把装置(445、545 或 745 克)来解决这个问题。我们发现 CTS 患者能够成功地根据物体重量调整握力。然而,患者的多数字力协调表现为对较轻物体重量的力调制的区分能力较低、跨试验数字力变异性较高、在连续试验中一致使用过大的数字力以及最小化物体净力矩的能力较低。重要的是,为了达到力和扭矩的平衡的力学要求,导致 CTS 患者在 CTS 受累的手指和感觉运动功能正常的手指上施加过大的力。这些发现表明,CTS 引起的触觉敏感性缺陷干扰了对先前操作的准确感觉运动记忆的形成。因此,CTS 患者使用补偿策略来最大限度地提高抓握稳定性,而不是像对照者那样始终施加更大的多数字力。这些行为缺陷对于需要精细调节指尖力来操作轻或易碎物体的任务可能特别有害。