Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Division of Preventive Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Jan 22;16(1):e0242963. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0242963. eCollection 2021.
Tai Chi (TC) mind-body exercise has been shown to reduce falls and improve balance and gait, however, few studies have evaluated the role of lower extremity muscle activation patterns in the observed benefits of TC on mobility.
To perform an exploratory analysis of the association between TC training and levels of lower extremity muscle co-contraction in healthy adults during walking under single-task (ST) and cognitive dual-task (DT) conditions.
Surface electromyography of the anterior tibialis and lateral gastrocnemius muscles was recorded during 90 sec trials of overground ST (walking normally) and DT (walking with verbalized serial subtractions) walking. A mean co-contraction index (CCI), across all strides, was calculated based on the percentage of total muscle activity when antagonist muscles were simultaneously activated. A hybrid study design investigated long-term effects of TC via a cross-sectional comparison of 27 TC experts and 60 age-matched TC-naïve older adults. A longitudinal comparison assessed the shorter-term effects of TC; TC-naïve participants were randomly allocated to either 6 months of TC training or to usual care.
Across all participants at baseline, greater CCI was correlated with slower gait speed under DT (β(95% CI) = -26.1(-48.6, -3.7)) but not ST (β(95% CI) = -15.4(-38.2, 7.4)) walking. Linear models adjusting for age, gender, BMI and other factors that differed at baseline indicated that TC experts exhibited lower CCI compared to TC naives under DT, but not ST conditions (ST: mean difference (95% CI) = -7.1(-15.2, 0.97); DT: mean difference (95% CI) = -10.1(-18.1, -2.4)). No differences were observed in CCI for TC-naive adults randomly assigned to 6 months of TC vs. usual care.
Lower extremity muscle co-contraction may play a role in the observed benefit of longer-term TC training on gait and postural control. Longer-duration and adequately powered randomized trials are needed to evaluate the effect of TC on neuromuscular coordination and its impact on postural control.
The randomized trial component of this study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01340365).
太极拳(TC)身心锻炼已被证明可减少跌倒并改善平衡和步态,但很少有研究评估下肢肌肉激活模式在 TC 对移动能力的观察益处中的作用。
在健康成年人进行单任务(ST)和认知双重任务(DT)步行时,对 TC 训练与下肢肌肉协同收缩水平之间的关联进行探索性分析。
在地面 ST(正常行走)和 DT(口头连续减法行走)行走 90 秒试验期间,记录胫骨前肌和外侧腓肠肌的表面肌电图。根据同时激活拮抗肌时的总肌肉活动百分比,计算整个步幅的平均协同收缩指数(CCI)。混合研究设计通过对 27 名 TC 专家和 60 名年龄匹配的 TC 新手老年人进行横断面比较来研究 TC 的长期影响。纵向比较评估了 TC 的短期影响;将 TC 新手随机分配到 6 个月的 TC 训练或常规护理中。
在所有基线参与者中,CCI 越大,DT 下的步态速度越慢(β(95%CI)=-26.1(-48.6,-3.7)),但 ST 下的步态速度不受影响(β(95%CI)=-15.4(-38.2,7.4))。调整基线差异的年龄、性别、BMI 和其他因素的线性模型表明,与 TC 新手相比,TC 专家在 DT 下的 CCI 较低,但在 ST 条件下则不然(ST:平均差异(95%CI)=-7.1(-15.2,0.97);DT:平均差异(95%CI)=-10.1(-18.1,-2.4))。随机分配到 6 个月 TC 与常规护理的 TC 新手成年人的 CCI 无差异。
下肢肌肉协同收缩可能在观察到的长期 TC 训练对步态和姿势控制的益处中发挥作用。需要进行更长时间和足够功率的随机试验,以评估 TC 对神经肌肉协调的影响及其对姿势控制的影响。
本研究的随机试验部分在 ClinicalTrials.gov 注册(NCT01340365)。