Vermillion Billy C, Lum Peter S, Lee Sang Wook
Department of Biomedical Engineering, The Catholic University of America, Washington, District of Columbia; Center for Applied Biomechanics and Rehabilitation Research, MedStar National Rehabilitation Hospital, Washington, District of Columbia; and.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, The Catholic University of America, Washington, District of Columbia; Center for Applied Biomechanics and Rehabilitation Research, MedStar National Rehabilitation Hospital, Washington, District of Columbia; and Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Washington, District of Columbia.
J Neurophysiol. 2015 Oct;114(4):2265-77. doi: 10.1152/jn.00227.2015. Epub 2015 Aug 19.
During object manipulation, grip force is coordinated with load force, which is primarily determined by object kinematics. Proximal arm kinematics may affect grip force control, as proximal segment motion could affect control of distal hand muscles via biomechanical and/or neural pathways. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of proximal kinematics on grip force modulation during object manipulation. Fifteen subjects performed three vertical lifting tasks that involved distinct proximal kinematics (elbow/shoulder), but resulted in similar end-point (hand) trajectories. While temporal coordination of grip and load forces remained similar across the tasks, proximal kinematics significantly affected the grip force-to-load force ratio (P = 0.042), intrinsic finger muscle activation (P = 0.045), and flexor-extensor ratio (P < 0.001). Biomechanical coupling between extrinsic hand muscles and the elbow joint cannot fully explain the observed changes, as task-related changes in intrinsic hand muscle activation were greater than in extrinsic hand muscles. Rather, between-task variation in grip force (highest during task 3) appears to contrast to that in shoulder joint velocity/acceleration (lowest during task 3). These results suggest that complex neural coupling between the distal and proximal upper extremity musculature may affect grip force control during movements, also indicated by task-related changes in intermuscular coherence of muscle pairs, including intrinsic finger muscles. Furthermore, examination of the fingertip force showed that the human motor system may attempt to reduce variability in task-relevant motor output (grip force-to-load force ratio), while allowing larger fluctuations in output less relevant to task goal (shear force-to-grip force ratio).
在物体操作过程中,握力与负载力相互协调,负载力主要由物体运动学决定。近端手臂运动学可能会影响握力控制,因为近端节段的运动可能通过生物力学和/或神经通路影响远端手部肌肉的控制。本研究的目的是调查近端运动学对物体操作过程中握力调制的影响。15名受试者进行了三项垂直举升任务,这些任务涉及不同的近端运动学(肘部/肩部),但产生了相似的终点(手部)轨迹。虽然在各项任务中握力和负载力的时间协调性保持相似,但近端运动学显著影响了握力与负载力的比值(P = 0.042)、手指固有肌的激活(P = 0.045)以及屈伸比(P < 0.001)。手部外在肌肉与肘关节之间的生物力学耦合无法完全解释观察到的变化,因为手部固有肌激活的任务相关变化大于手部外在肌肉。相反,任务间握力的变化(任务3期间最高)似乎与肩关节速度/加速度的变化(任务3期间最低)形成对比。这些结果表明,远端和近端上肢肌肉组织之间复杂的神经耦合可能会影响运动过程中的握力控制,肌肉对(包括手指固有肌)的肌间相干性的任务相关变化也表明了这一点。此外,对指尖力的检查表明,人类运动系统可能试图减少与任务相关的运动输出(握力与负载力的比值)的变异性,同时允许与任务目标相关性较小的输出(剪切力与握力的比值)有更大的波动。