St George R J, Gurfinkel V S, Kraakevik J, Nutt J G, Horak F B
Sensorimotor Neuroscience and Ageing, School of Medicine, University of Tasmania , Australia.
Department of Neurology, Oregon Health & Science University , Portland, Oregon.
J Neurophysiol. 2018 Jan 1;119(1):33-38. doi: 10.1152/jn.00582.2017. Epub 2017 Oct 4.
Upright stance in humans requires an intricate exchange between the neural mechanisms that control balance and those that control posture; however, the distinction between these control systems is hard to discern in healthy subjects. By studying balance and postural control of a participant with camptocormia - an involuntary flexion of the trunk during standing that resolves when supine - a divergence between balance and postural control was revealed. A kinematic and kinetic investigation of standing and walking showed a stereotyped flexion of the upper body by almost 80° over a few minutes, and yet the participant's ability to control center of mass within the base of support and to compensate for external perturbations remained intact. This unique case also revealed the involvement of automatic, tonic control of the paraspinal muscles during standing and the effects of attention. Although strength was reduced and MRI showed a reduction in muscle mass, there was sufficient strength to maintain an upright posture under voluntary control and when using geste antagoniste maneuvers or "sensory tricks" from visual, auditory, and haptic biofeedback. Dual tasks that either increased or decreased the attention given to postural alignment would decrease or increase the postural flexion, respectively. The custom-made "twister" device that measured axial resistance to slow passive rotation revealed abnormalities in axial muscle tone distribution during standing. The results suggest that the disorder in this case was due to a disruption in the automatic, tonic drive to the postural muscles and that myogenic changes were secondary. NEW & NOTEWORTHY By studying an idiopathic camptocormia case with a detailed biomechanical and sensorimotor approach, we have demonstrated unique insights into the neural control of human bipedalism 1) balance and postural control cannot be considered the same neural process, as there is a stereotyped abnormal flexed posture, without balance deficits, associated with camptocormia, and 2) posture during standing is controlled by automatic axial tone but "sensory tricks" involving sensory biofeedback to direct voluntary attention to postural alignment can override, when required.
人类的直立姿势需要控制平衡的神经机制与控制姿势的神经机制之间进行复杂的交互;然而,在健康受试者中,这些控制系统之间的区别很难辨别。通过研究一名患有脊柱前凸症(站立时躯干不自主屈曲,仰卧时缓解)参与者的平衡和姿势控制,发现了平衡控制和姿势控制之间的差异。一项关于站立和行走的运动学和动力学研究表明,在几分钟内上半身会出现近80°的刻板屈曲,但参与者在支撑面内控制重心并补偿外部干扰的能力保持完好。这个独特的案例还揭示了站立时椎旁肌肉自动、紧张性控制的参与以及注意力的影响。尽管力量减弱且磁共振成像显示肌肉质量减少,但仍有足够的力量在自愿控制下以及使用视觉、听觉和触觉生物反馈的对抗性动作或“感觉技巧”时维持直立姿势。增加或减少对姿势对齐关注的双重任务会分别减少或增加姿势屈曲。测量轴向对缓慢被动旋转阻力的定制“扭转器”装置显示,站立时轴向肌张力分布存在异常。结果表明,该病例中的病症是由于对姿势肌肉的自动、紧张性驱动受到干扰,而肌源性变化是继发性的。新内容及值得注意之处 通过采用详细的生物力学和感觉运动方法研究一例特发性脊柱前凸症病例,我们对人类两足行走的神经控制有了独特的见解:1)平衡控制和姿势控制不能被视为相同的神经过程,因为脊柱前凸症伴有刻板的异常屈曲姿势但无平衡缺陷,2)站立时的姿势由自动轴向肌张力控制,但涉及感觉生物反馈以将自愿注意力引导至姿势对齐的“感觉技巧”在需要时可以超越这种控制。