Bhatt Tanvi, Patel Prakruti, Dusane Shamali, DelDonno Sophie R, Langenecker Scott A
Department of Physical Therapy, College of Applied Health Sciences, Chicago, IL, United States.
Department of Psychiatry, College of Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2018 Sep 26;12:203. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2018.00203. eCollection 2018.
Behavioral evidence for cortical involvement in reactive balance control in response to environmental perturbation is established, however, the neural correlates are not known. This study aimed to examine the neural mechanisms involved in reactive balance control for recovery from slip-like perturbations using mental imagery and to evaluate the difference in activation patterns between imagined and observed slipping. Ten healthy young participants after an exposure to regular walking and slip-perturbation trial on a treadmill, performed mental imagery and observation tasks in the MR scanner. Participants received verbal instructions to imagine walking (IW), observe walking (OW), imagine slipping (IS) and observe slipping (OS) while walking. Analysis using general linear model showed increased activation during IS versus IW condition in precentral gyrus, middle frontal gyrus, superior, middle and transverse temporal gyrus, parahippocampal gyrus, cingulate gyrus, insula, pulvinar nucleus of the thalamus, pons, anterior and posterior cerebellar lobes. During IS versus OS condition, there was additional activation in parahippocampus, cingulate gyrus, inferior parietal lobule, superior temporal, middle and inferior frontal gyrus. The findings of the current study support involvement of higher cortical and subcortical structures in reactive balance control. Greater activation during slipping could be attributed to the complexity of the sensorimotor task and increased demands to maintain postural stability during slipping as compared with regular walking. Furthermore, our findings suggest that mental imagery of slipping recruited greater neural substrates rather than observation of slipping, possibly due to increased sensory, cognitive and perceptual processing demands. The behavioral factors contributing to falls from external perturbations while walking are better understood than neural mechanisms underlying the behavioral response. This study examines the neural activation pattern associated with reactive balance control during slip-like perturbations while walking through an fMRI paradigm. This study identified specific neural mechanisms involved in complex postural movements during sudden perturbations, to particularly determine the role of cortical structures in reactive balance control. It further highlights the specific differences in neural structures involved in regular unperturbed versus perturbed walking.
虽然已经有行为学证据表明皮质参与了对环境扰动的反应性平衡控制,但其神经关联尚不清楚。本研究旨在使用心理意象来检查参与从类似滑倒扰动中恢复的反应性平衡控制的神经机制,并评估想象滑倒和观察滑倒之间激活模式的差异。10名健康的年轻参与者在跑步机上进行了常规行走和滑倒扰动试验后,在磁共振成像扫描仪中执行心理意象和观察任务。参与者在行走时接受口头指示,想象行走(IW)、观察行走(OW)、想象滑倒(IS)和观察滑倒(OS)。使用一般线性模型进行分析显示,与IW状态相比,IS状态下中央前回、额中回、颞上回、颞中回、颞横回、海马旁回、扣带回、脑岛、丘脑枕核、脑桥、小脑前叶和后叶的激活增加。与OS状态相比,IS状态下海马旁回、扣带回、顶下小叶、颞上回、额上回、额中回和额下回还有额外的激活。本研究结果支持高级皮质和皮质下结构参与反应性平衡控制。与正常行走相比,滑倒时更大的激活可能归因于感觉运动任务的复杂性以及滑倒时维持姿势稳定性的更高要求。此外,我们的研究结果表明,滑倒的心理意象比观察滑倒招募了更多的神经基质,这可能是由于感觉、认知和感知处理需求增加。与导致行走时因外部扰动而跌倒的行为反应背后的神经机制相比,导致跌倒的行为因素更容易理解。本研究通过功能磁共振成像范式检查了行走时类似滑倒扰动期间与反应性平衡控制相关的神经激活模式。本研究确定了突然扰动期间复杂姿势运动所涉及的特定神经机制,特别是确定皮质结构在反应性平衡控制中的作用。它进一步突出了正常无扰动行走与扰动行走所涉及的神经结构的具体差异。