Department of Biomedical Engineering, Catholic University of America, Washington, District of Columbia, United States.
Center for Applied Biomechanics and Rehabilitation Research, MedStar National Rehabilitation Hospital, Washington, District of Columbia, United States.
J Neurophysiol. 2023 Sep 1;130(3):608-618. doi: 10.1152/jn.00125.2023. Epub 2023 Aug 2.
Large bilateral asymmetry and task deficits are typically observed during bimanual actions of stroke survivors. Do these abnormalities originate from unilateral impairments affecting their more-impaired limb, such as weakness and abnormal synergy, or from bilateral impairments such as incoordination of two limbs? To answer this question, 23 subjects including 10 chronic stroke survivors and 13 neurologically intact subjects participated in an experiment where they produced bimanual forces at different hand locations. The force magnitude and directional deviation of the more-impaired arm were measured for unilateral impairments and bimanual coordination across locations for bilateral impairments. Force asymmetry and task error were used to define task performance. Significant unilateral impairments were observed in subjects with stroke; the maximal force capacity of their more-impaired arm was significantly lower than that of their less-impaired arm, with a higher degree of force deviation. However, its force contribution during submaximal tasks was greater than its relative force capacity. Significant bilateral impairments were also observed, as stroke survivors modulated two forces to a larger degree across hand locations but in a less coordinated manner than control subjects did. But only unilateral, not bilateral, impairments explained a significant amount of between-subject variability in force asymmetry across subjects with stroke. Task error, in contrast, was correlated with neither unilateral nor bilateral impairments. Our results suggest that unilateral impairments of the more-impaired arm of stroke survivors mainly contribute to its reduced recruitment, but that the degree of its participation in bimanual task may be greater than their capacity as they attempt to achieve symmetry. We studied how unilateral and bilateral impairments in stroke survivors affect their bimanual task performance. Unilateral impairments of the more-impaired limb, both weakness and loss of directional control, mainly contribute to bimanual asymmetry, but stroke survivors generally produce higher force with their more-impaired limb than their relative capacity. Bilateral force coordination was significantly impaired in stroke survivors, but its degree of impairment was not related to their unilateral impairments.
脑卒中幸存者在进行双手动作时通常会出现双侧明显的不对称和动作缺陷。这些异常是源于单侧损伤对其较重侧肢体的影响,如力量减弱和异常协同作用,还是源于双侧损伤,如两个肢体的协调性差?为了回答这个问题,我们邀请了 23 名参与者,包括 10 名慢性脑卒中幸存者和 13 名神经完整的个体,让他们在不同的手部位置产生双手力量。测量了单侧损伤时较重侧手臂的力大小和方向偏差,以及双侧损伤时跨位置的双手协调力。使用力不对称和任务误差来定义任务表现。我们观察到脑卒中患者存在明显的单侧损伤;他们较重侧手臂的最大力量能力明显低于较轻侧手臂,力量偏差程度更高。然而,在进行次最大任务时,其力贡献大于相对力量能力。我们还观察到了明显的双侧损伤,脑卒中幸存者在跨手部位置时对两个力的调节程度更大,但协调方式不如对照组。但只有单侧损伤,而不是双侧损伤,能够解释脑卒中患者之间力不对称的大量个体间变异性。相比之下,任务误差与单侧或双侧损伤均无相关性。我们的结果表明,脑卒中幸存者较重侧手臂的单侧损伤主要导致其募集减少,但为了实现对称性,他们可能会更大程度地参与双手任务,即使这超过了其能力。我们研究了脑卒中患者的单侧和双侧损伤如何影响他们的双手任务表现。较重侧肢体的单侧损伤,包括力量减弱和方向控制丧失,主要导致双手不对称,但脑卒中幸存者通常会用较重侧手臂产生高于其相对能力的力量。脑卒中幸存者的双侧力协调明显受损,但其损伤程度与单侧损伤无关。