Shanahan Camille J, Hodges Paul W, Wrigley Tim V, Bennell Kim L, Farrell Michael J
Department of Physiotherapy, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
The Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health, Kenneth Myer Building, 30 Royal Parade, Parkville, VIC, 3052, Australia.
Arthritis Res Ther. 2015 Jun 18;17(1):164. doi: 10.1186/s13075-015-0676-4.
The aim of this study was to investigate possible differences in the organisation of the motor cortex in people with knee osteoarthritis (OA) and whether there is an association between cortical organisation and accuracy of a motor task.
fMRI data were collected while 11 participants with moderate/severe right knee OA (6 male, 69 ± 6 (mean ± SD) years) and seven asymptomatic controls (5 male, 64 ± 6 years) performed three visually guided, variable force, force matching motor tasks involving isolated isometric muscle contractions of: 1) quadriceps (knee), 2) tibialis anterior (ankle) and, 3) finger/thumb flexor (hand) muscles. fMRI data were used to map the loci of peak activation in the motor cortex during the three tasks and to assess whether there were differences in the organisation of the motor cortex between the groups for the three motor tasks. Root mean square of the difference between target and generated forces during muscle contraction quantified task accuracy.
A 4.1 mm anterior shift in the representation of the knee (p = 0.03) and swap of the relative position of the knee and ankle representations in the motor cortex (p = 0.003) were found in people with knee OA. Poorer performance of the knee task was associated with more anterior placement of motor cortex loci in people with (p = 0.05) and without (p = 0.02) knee OA.
Differences in the organisation of the motor cortex in knee OA was demonstrated in relation to performance of knee and ankle motor tasks and was related to quality of performance of the knee motor task. These results highlight the possible mechanistic link between cortical changes and modified motor behavior in people with knee OA.
本研究旨在调查膝关节骨关节炎(OA)患者运动皮层组织可能存在的差异,以及皮层组织与运动任务准确性之间是否存在关联。
收集了11名中度/重度右膝OA患者(6名男性,年龄69±6(均值±标准差)岁)和7名无症状对照者(5名男性,年龄64±6岁)在进行三项视觉引导、可变力、力匹配运动任务时的功能磁共振成像(fMRI)数据,这些任务涉及以下孤立等长肌肉收缩:1)股四头肌(膝关节),2)胫前肌(踝关节),3)手指/拇指屈肌(手部)。fMRI数据用于绘制三项任务期间运动皮层中峰值激活的位点,并评估两组在三项运动任务中运动皮层组织是否存在差异。肌肉收缩期间目标力与产生力之间差异的均方根量化了任务准确性。
在膝关节OA患者中发现,膝关节代表区向前移位4.1毫米(p = 0.03),且膝关节和踝关节代表区在运动皮层中的相对位置发生互换(p = 0.003)。膝关节任务表现较差与膝关节OA患者(p = 0.05)和非膝关节OA患者(p = 0.02)运动皮层位点更靠前的位置有关。
膝关节OA患者运动皮层组织的差异在膝关节和踝关节运动任务表现方面得到证实,并且与膝关节运动任务的表现质量相关。这些结果突出了膝关节OA患者皮层变化与运动行为改变之间可能的机制联系。