Major Matthew J, Stine Rebecca L, Heckathorne Craig W, Fatone Stefania, Gard Steven A
Northwestern University Prosthetics-Orthotics Center, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, 680 N Lake Shore Dr, Suite 1100, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.
J Neuroeng Rehabil. 2014 Sep 6;11:132. doi: 10.1186/1743-0003-11-132.
Current upper limb prostheses do not replace the active degrees-of-freedom distal to the elbow inherent to intact physiology. Limited evidence suggests that transradial prosthesis users demonstrate shoulder and trunk movements to compensate for these missing volitional degrees-of-freedom. The purpose of this study was to enhance understanding of the effects of prosthesis use on motor performance by comparing the movement quality of upper body kinematics between transradial prosthesis users and able-bodied controls when executing goal-oriented tasks that reflect activities of daily living.
Upper body kinematics were collected on six able-bodied controls and seven myoelectric transradial prosthesis users during execution of goal-oriented tasks. Range-of-motion, absolute kinematic variability (standard deviation), and kinematic repeatability (adjusted coefficient-of-multiple-determination) were quantified for trunk motion in three planes, shoulder flexion/extension, shoulder ab/adduction, and elbow flexion/extension across five trials per task. Linear mixed models analysis assessed between-group differences and correlation analysis evaluated association between prosthesis experience and kinematic repeatability.
Across tasks, prosthesis users demonstrated increased trunk motion in all three planes and shoulder abduction compared to controls (p ≤ 0.004). Absolute kinematic variability was greater for prosthesis users for all degrees-of-freedom irrespective of task, but was significant only for degrees-of-freedom that demonstrated increased range-of-motion (p ≤ 0.003). For degrees-of-freedom that did not display increased absolute variability for prosthesis users, able-bodied kinematics were characterized by significantly greater repeatability (p ≤ 0.015). Prosthesis experience had a strong positive relationship with average kinematic repeatability (r = 0.790, p = 0.034).
The use of shoulder and trunk movements by prosthesis users as compensatory motions to execute goal-oriented tasks demonstrates the flexibility and adaptability of the motor system. Increased variability in movement suggests that prosthesis users do not converge on a defined motor strategy to the same degree as able-bodied individuals. Kinematic repeatability may increase with prosthesis experience, or encourage continued device use, and future work is warranted to explore these relationships. As compensatory dynamics may be necessary to improve functionality of transradial prostheses, users may benefit from dedicated training that encourages optimization of these dynamics to facilitate execution of daily living activity, and fosters adaptable but reliable motor strategies.
目前的上肢假肢无法替代完整生理状态下肘部远端固有的主动自由度。有限的证据表明,经桡骨截肢的假肢使用者会表现出肩部和躯干运动,以补偿这些缺失的自主自由度。本研究的目的是通过比较经桡骨截肢的假肢使用者和健全对照者在执行反映日常生活活动的目标导向任务时上半身运动学的运动质量,增强对假肢使用对运动表现影响的理解。
在执行目标导向任务期间,收集了6名健全对照者和7名肌电经桡骨截肢的假肢使用者的上半身运动学数据。针对每个任务的五次试验,对三个平面的躯干运动、肩部屈伸、肩部外展/内收以及肘部屈伸的运动范围、绝对运动学变异性(标准差)和运动学重复性(调整后的多重决定系数)进行了量化。线性混合模型分析评估了组间差异,相关分析评估了假肢使用经验与运动学重复性之间的关联。
在所有任务中,与对照者相比,假肢使用者在所有三个平面以及肩部外展方面的躯干运动均增加(p≤0.004)。无论任务如何,假肢使用者在所有自由度上的绝对运动学变异性都更大,但仅在运动范围增加的自由度上具有显著性(p≤0.003)。对于假肢使用者绝对变异性未增加的自由度,健全人的运动学特征是重复性显著更高(p≤0.015)。假肢使用经验与平均运动学重复性呈强正相关(r = 0.790,p = 0.034)。
假肢使用者将肩部和躯干运动用作执行目标导向任务的补偿性动作,这证明了运动系统的灵活性和适应性。运动变异性的增加表明,假肢使用者与健全个体相比,没有在相同程度上趋向于一种明确的运动策略。运动学重复性可能会随着假肢使用经验的增加而提高,或者鼓励持续使用假肢装置,未来有必要开展工作来探索这些关系。由于补偿性动力学可能是改善经桡骨截肢假肢功能所必需的,使用者可能会受益于专门的训练,这种训练鼓励优化这些动力学,以促进日常生活活动的执行,并培养适应性强但可靠的运动策略。