Horak F B, Nashner L M, Diener H C
Neurological Sciences Institute of Good Samaritan Hospital and Medical Center, Portland, OR 97209.
Exp Brain Res. 1990;82(1):167-77. doi: 10.1007/BF00230848.
This study examines the roles of somatosensory and vestibular information in the coordination of postural responses. The role of somatosensory information was examined by comparing postural responses of healthy control subjects prior to and following somatosensory loss due to hypoxic anesthesia of the feet and ankles. The role of vestibular information was evaluated by comparing the postural responses of control subjects and patients with bilateral vestibular loss. Postural responses were quantified by measuring 1) spatial and temporal characteristics of leg and trunk EMG activation; 2) ankle, knee, and hip joint kinematics, and 3) surface forces in response to anterior and posterior surface translations under different visual and surface conditions. Results showed that neither vestibular nor somatosensory loss resulted in delayed or disorganized postural responses. However, both types of sensory deficits altered the type of postural response selected under a given set of conditions. Somatosensory loss resulted in an increased hip strategy for postural correction, similar to the movement strategy used by control subjects while standing across a shortened surface. Vestibular loss resulted in a normal ankle strategy but lack of a hip strategy, even when required for the task of maintaining equilibrium on a shortened surface. Neither somatosensory nor vestibular loss resulted in difficulty in utilizing remaining sensory information for orientation during quiet stance. These results support the hypothesis that cutaneous and joint somatosensory information from the feet and ankles may play an important role in assuring that the form of postural movements are appropriate for the current biomechanical constraints of the surface and/or foot. The results also suggest that vestibular information is necessary in controlling equilibrium in a task requiring use of the hip strategy. Thus, both somatosensory and vestibular sensory information play important roles in the selection of postural movement strategies appropriate for their environmental contexts.
本研究探讨了体感和前庭信息在姿势反应协调中的作用。通过比较健康对照受试者在因足部和踝关节缺氧麻醉导致体感丧失之前和之后的姿势反应,来研究体感信息的作用。通过比较对照受试者和双侧前庭丧失患者的姿势反应,来评估前庭信息的作用。姿势反应通过测量以下内容进行量化:1)腿部和躯干肌电图激活的空间和时间特征;2)踝关节、膝关节和髋关节的运动学,以及3)在不同视觉和表面条件下,对前后表面平移的反应中的表面力。结果表明,前庭丧失和体感丧失均未导致姿势反应延迟或紊乱。然而,这两种感觉缺陷都改变了在给定条件下所选择的姿势反应类型。体感丧失导致用于姿势校正的髋策略增加,类似于对照受试者在跨过缩短的表面站立时所使用的运动策略。前庭丧失导致正常的踝策略,但缺乏髋策略,即使在缩短表面上保持平衡的任务需要时也是如此。体感丧失和前庭丧失均未导致在安静站立期间利用剩余感觉信息进行定向时出现困难。这些结果支持了以下假设:来自足部和踝关节的皮肤和关节体感信息可能在确保姿势运动形式适合当前表面和/或足部的生物力学限制方面发挥重要作用。结果还表明,在需要使用髋策略的任务中,前庭信息对于控制平衡是必要的。因此,体感和前庭感觉信息在选择适合其环境背景的姿势运动策略中都起着重要作用。