Program in Physical Therapy, Mayo Clinic School of Health Sciences, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science, Rochester, MN, USA; Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
Military Performance Division, US Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Natick, MA, USA.
Clin Biomech (Bristol). 2021 Dec;90:105513. doi: 10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2021.105513. Epub 2021 Oct 16.
Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries impair knee extensor and flexor force generation and may alter force variability. Fractal scaling exponents quantify signal complexity and reflect neuromuscular system adaptability. The purpose of this study was to evaluate force variability magnitudes and fractal scaling exponents in persons with ACL injuries.
Twenty-four individuals with ACL injury (time from injury: 55 ± 66 days) and 25 uninjured controls completed 10-s isometric knee extension and flexion contractions on a dynamometer at 10%, 25%, 35%, and 50% of peak force. The middle 8-s of data were used to calculate coefficients of variation and fractal exponents. Injured and non-injured limbs as well as dominant and non-dominant limbs in the control group were compared with ANOVA (P < 0.05).
Peak knee extensor and flexor forces were 19% and 10% lower in the injured limb of ACL-deficient participants (P = 0.014 and P = 0.036, respectively). Fractal scaling exponents of knee extensor force signals at 25% and 35% peak force in injured limbs were higher than in non-injured limbs (P = 0.008 and P = 0.027, respectively). The fractal scaling exponent of knee extensor force signals was greater in injured limbs of ACL-deficient participants than in dominant limbs of the control group at 35% peak force (P = 0.046). The magnitude of variability did not differ between limbs in ACL-deficient participants or between the injured and control groups.
Altered fractal exponents in knee extensor force signals represent sensorimotor and neuromuscular system deficits in individuals with ACL injury. Overall, fractal analysis identified both between-limb and between-group differences.
前交叉韧带(ACL)损伤会损害膝关节伸肌和屈肌的力量产生,并可能改变力量的可变性。分形标度指数可以量化信号的复杂性,并反映出神经肌肉系统的适应性。本研究的目的是评估 ACL 损伤患者的力量可变性幅度和分形标度指数。
24 名 ACL 损伤患者(受伤时间:55±66 天)和 25 名未受伤的对照组在测力计上完成了 10 秒的等长膝关节伸展和屈曲收缩,在 10%、25%、35%和 50%的峰值力下。使用中间 8 秒的数据来计算变异系数和分形指数。使用 ANOVA 比较 ACL 缺陷参与者受伤和未受伤的肢体以及对照组的优势和非优势肢体(P<0.05)。
ACL 缺陷参与者受伤侧膝关节伸肌和屈肌的峰值力量分别降低了 19%和 10%(P=0.014 和 P=0.036)。受伤侧膝关节伸肌力信号在 25%和 35%峰值力时的分形标度指数高于未受伤侧(P=0.008 和 P=0.027)。在 35%的峰值力下,ACL 缺陷参与者受伤侧的膝关节伸肌力信号的分形标度指数高于对照组优势侧的肢体(P=0.046)。ACL 缺陷参与者的四肢之间以及受伤组和对照组之间的可变性幅度没有差异。
膝关节伸肌力信号中分形指数的改变代表了 ACL 损伤患者的感觉运动和神经肌肉系统缺陷。总体而言,分形分析确定了四肢之间和组之间的差异。