Bexander Catharina S M, Hodges Paul W
NHMRC Centre of Clinical Research Excellence in Spinal Pain, Injury and Health, School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
PM R. 2019 Sep;11(9):944-953. doi: 10.1002/pmrj.12059. Epub 2019 Jun 12.
People with whiplash-associated disorders (WADs) report difficulty with quick head movements and cervicoocular dysfunction. Changes in coordination between eye movement and neck muscle activity may be involved.
To examine whether activity of superficial and deep neck muscles increases with eye movement when the head is held in a fixed position, whether this differs between directions and speed of eye movement, and whether this is modified in WAD.
Convenience case series with unmatched controls.
Research laboratory.
Nine individuals with chronic WAD grade II and 11 pain-free controls.
Electromyography (EMG) was recorded from muscles that could act to rotate the neck to the right (right obliquus capitis inferior [OI], multifidus [MF], splenius capitis [SC], and left sternocleidomastoid [SCM]) with intramuscular or surface electrodes in 9 WAD participants and 11 pain-free controls. Eyes were rotated without head movement to track slow and medium-speed targets to the right or left, and as fast as possible (FP).
Amplitude of EMG.
In controls, SCM and SC EMG increased with right gaze (all P's < .03). EMG of the deep OI muscle increased in both directions (P < .001). WAD involved counterintuitive greater activity of SCM with left rotation across speeds of eye movement (SC with slow movement, P < .036), decreased OI EMG with gaze left (P < .019), and no change in MF EMG (P < .6) in either gaze direction. For FP tasks, EMG of all muscles was greater than slower speeds in controls (all P's < .0001), but not WAD (all P's > .33).
Coordination between neck muscle activity and eye movements with increasing speed is modified in WAD. Contrasting changes are present in deep and superficial neck muscles with implications for neck function that may explain some common WAD symptoms.
IV.
挥鞭样相关疾病(WAD)患者报告存在快速头部运动困难和颈眼功能障碍。眼动与颈部肌肉活动之间的协调变化可能与之有关。
研究当头保持固定位置时,眼动过程中颈部浅层和深层肌肉的活动是否增加,这种情况在眼动方向和速度上是否存在差异,以及在WAD患者中是否有所改变。
采用不匹配对照的便利病例系列研究。
研究实验室。
9例慢性II级WAD患者和11名无疼痛对照者。
在9例WAD参与者和11名无疼痛对照者中,使用肌内或表面电极记录可使颈部向右侧旋转的肌肉(右侧下斜方肌[OI]、多裂肌[MF]、头夹肌[SC]和左侧胸锁乳突肌[SCM])的肌电图(EMG)。在头部不移动的情况下转动眼睛,以跟踪向右或向左的慢速和中速目标,以及尽可能快的速度(FP)。
EMG幅度。
在对照者中,右侧凝视时SCM和SC的EMG增加(所有P值<0.03)。深层OI肌肉的EMG在两个方向上均增加(P<0.001)。WAD患者中,在不同眼动速度下,向左旋转时SCM的活动出现了与直觉相反的更大增加(慢速运动时SC,P<0.036),向左凝视时OI的EMG降低(P<0.019),并且在任一凝视方向上MF的EMG均无变化(P>0.6)。对于FP任务,对照者中所有肌肉的EMG均高于较慢速度时(所有P值<0.0001),但WAD患者中并非如此(所有P值>0.33)。
WAD患者中颈部肌肉活动与眼动之间的协调随着速度增加而改变。颈部深层和浅层肌肉出现了对比性变化,这对颈部功能有影响,可能解释了一些常见的WAD症状。
IV级。