Department of Kinesiology, University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Department of Physical Therapy and Human Movement Sciences, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL.
J Athl Train. 2024 Jul 1;59(7):713-723. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-0246.22.
Chronic ankle instability (CAI) is associated with a less flexible and adaptable sensorimotor system. Thus, individuals with CAI may present an inadequate sensory reweighting system, inhibiting their ability to place more emphasis (upweight) on reliable sensory feedback to control posture. However, how individuals with CAI reweight sensory feedback to maintain postural control in bilateral and unilateral stances has not been established.
To examine (1) group differences in how the sensory reweighting system changes to control posture in a simple double-limb stance and a more complex single-limb stance (uninjured limb and injured limb) under increased environmental constraints manipulating somatosensory and visual information for individuals with and without CAI and (2) the effect of environmental and task constraints on postural control.
Case-control study.
Laboratory.
A total of 21 individuals with CAI (age = 26.4 ± 5.7 years, height = 171.2 ± 9.8 cm, mass = 76.6 ± 15.17 kg) and 21 individuals without CAI (control group; age = 25.8 ± 5.7 years, height = 169.5 ± 9.5 cm, mass = 72.4 ± 15.0 kg) participated.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): We examined the equilibrium scores based on the first 10 seconds of trials in which participants completed 6 environmental conditions of the Sensory Organization Test during 3 tasks (double-limb and single-limb [uninjured and injured] stances). Sensory reweighting ratios for sensory systems (somatosensory, vision, and vestibular) were computed from paired equilibrium scores based on the first 10 seconds of the trials.
We observed 3-factor interactions between groups, sensory systems, and tasks (F4,160 = 3.754, P = .006) and for group, task, and environment (F10,400 = 2.455, P = .007). The CAI group did not downweight vestibular feedback compared with the control group while maintaining posture on the injured limb (P = .03). The CAI group demonstrated better postural stability than the control group while standing with absent vision (ie, eyes closed), fixed surroundings, and a moving platform on the injured limb (P = .03).
The CAI group relied on vestibular feedback while maintaining better postural stability than the control group in injured-limb stance. Group differences in postural control depended on both environmental (absent vision and moving platform) and task (injured limb) constraints.
慢性踝关节不稳定(CAI)与灵活性和适应性较差的感觉运动系统有关。因此,CAI 患者可能表现出不充分的感觉再平衡系统,抑制了他们将更多注意力(上调)放在可靠的感觉反馈上以控制姿势的能力。然而,CAI 患者如何重新平衡感觉反馈以在双侧和单侧姿势中维持姿势控制,目前尚不清楚。
检查(1)在增加环境限制的情况下,CAI 患者和无 CAI 患者的感觉再平衡系统如何改变以控制简单双肢姿势和更复杂的单肢姿势(未受伤肢体和受伤肢体)中的姿势,以及(2)环境和任务限制对姿势控制的影响。
病例对照研究。
实验室。
共有 21 名 CAI 患者(年龄=26.4±5.7 岁,身高=171.2±9.8cm,体重=76.6±15.17kg)和 21 名无 CAI 患者(对照组;年龄=25.8±5.7 岁,身高=169.5±9.5cm,体重=72.4±15.0kg)参加了研究。
我们根据参与者在 3 项任务(双肢和单肢[未受伤和受伤]姿势)中完成感觉组织测试的前 10 秒的试验,检查平衡分数。根据试验前 10 秒的配对平衡分数计算感觉系统(本体感觉、视觉和前庭)的感觉再平衡比。
我们观察到组间、感觉系统和任务之间的 3 因素相互作用(F4,160=3.754,P=.006)以及组、任务和环境之间的相互作用(F10,400=2.455,P=.007)。与对照组相比,CAI 组在受伤肢体上保持姿势时并未下调前庭反馈(P=.03)。与对照组相比,CAI 组在受伤肢体上睁眼闭眼、固定环境和移动平台时表现出更好的姿势稳定性(P=.03)。
CAI 组在受伤肢体姿势中依赖前庭反馈,同时保持比对照组更好的姿势稳定性。姿势控制的组间差异取决于环境(视觉缺失和移动平台)和任务(受伤肢体)的限制。