McCrum Christopher, Eysel-Gosepath Katrin, Epro Gaspar, Meijer Kenneth, Savelberg Hans H C M, Brüggemann Gert-Peter, Karamanidis Kiros
Human Movement Science, NUTRIM, School for Nutrition, Toxicology and Metabolism, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Department of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Heinrich Heine University of Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany.
Physiol Rep. 2014 Dec 11;2(12). doi: 10.14814/phy2.12222. Print 2014 Dec 1.
Unilateral peripheral vestibular disorder (UPVD) causes deficient locomotor responses to novel environments due to a lack of accurate vestibular sensory information, increasing fall risk. This study aimed to examine recovery response (stability recovery actions) and adaptive feedback potential in dynamic stability of UPVD-patients and healthy control subjects during perturbed walking. 17 UPVD-patients (>6 months since onset) and 17 matched healthy control participants walked on a treadmill and were subjected to eight unexpected perturbations during the swing phase of the right leg. For each perturbation, the margin of stability (MS; state of body's centre of mass in relation to the base of support), was determined at touchdown of the perturbed leg and during the following six recovery steps. The first perturbation caused a reduced MS at touchdown for the perturbed leg compared to baseline, indicating an unstable position, with controls requiring five recovery steps to return to MS baseline and UPVD-patients not returning to baseline level within the analyzed six recovery steps. By the eighth perturbation, control subjects needed two steps, and UPVD-patients required three recovery steps, both thereby improving their recovery response with practice. However, MS at touchdown of the perturbed leg increased only for the controls after repeated perturbations, indicating adaptive feedback-driven locomotor improvements for the controls, but not for the UPVD-patients. We concluded that UPVD-patients have a diminished ability to control dynamic gait stability during unexpected perturbations, increasing their fall risk, and that vestibular dysfunction may inhibit the neuromotor system adapting the reactive motor response to perturbations.
单侧外周前庭疾病(UPVD)由于缺乏准确的前庭感觉信息,导致对新环境的运动反应不足,增加了跌倒风险。本研究旨在检查UPVD患者和健康对照者在受干扰步行过程中的恢复反应(稳定性恢复动作)和动态稳定性中的适应性反馈潜力。17名UPVD患者(发病超过6个月)和17名匹配的健康对照参与者在跑步机上行走,并在右腿摆动期受到8次意外干扰。对于每次干扰,在受干扰腿着地时以及随后的六个恢复步骤中,确定稳定性 margin(MS;身体重心相对于支撑基底的状态)。与基线相比,第一次干扰导致受干扰腿着地时的MS降低,表明位置不稳定,对照组需要五个恢复步骤才能恢复到MS基线,而UPVD患者在分析的六个恢复步骤内未恢复到基线水平。到第八次干扰时,对照受试者需要两步,UPVD患者需要三个恢复步骤,两者都通过练习改善了他们的恢复反应。然而,只有对照组在反复干扰后受干扰腿着地时的MS增加,表明对照组通过适应性反馈驱动运动改善,而UPVD患者则没有。我们得出结论,UPVD患者在意外干扰期间控制动态步态稳定性的能力减弱,增加了他们的跌倒风险,并且前庭功能障碍可能会抑制神经运动系统使反应性运动反应适应干扰。