Department of Physical Therapy, College of Applied Health Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1919 W Taylor Street, Chicago, IL, 60612, USA.
Ph.D. Program in Rehabilitation Sciences, College of Applied Health Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1919 W Taylor Street, Chicago, IL, 60612, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 2024 Mar;242(3):559-570. doi: 10.1007/s00221-023-06729-z. Epub 2024 Jan 12.
Individuals with stroke demonstrate a twofold higher fall incidence compared to healthy counterparts, potentially associated with deficits in reactive balance control, which is crucial for regaining balance from unpredictable perturbations to the body. Moreover, people with higher stroke-related motor impairment exhibit greater falls and cannot recover balance during higher perturbation intensities. Thus, they might need supplemental agents for fall prevention or even to be included in a perturbation-based protocol. Functional electrical stimulation is a widely used clinical modality for improving gait performance; however, it remains unknown whether it can enhance or interfere with reactive balance control.
We recruited twelve ambulatory participants with hemiparetic stroke (61.48 ± 6.77 years) and moderate-to-high motor impairment (Chedoke-McMaster Stroke Leg Assessment ≤ 4/7). Each participant experienced 4 unpredicted paretic gait-slips, with and without functional electrical stimulation (provided 50-500 ms after perturbation) in random order. The paretic quadriceps muscle group was chosen to receive electrical stimulation, considering the role of support limb knee extensors for preventing limb-collapse. Outcomes including primary (laboratory falls), secondary (reactive stability, vertical limb support) and tertiary (compensatory step length, step initiation, execution time) measures were compared between the two conditions.
Participants demonstrated fewer falls, higher reactive stability, and higher vertical limb support (p < 0.05) following gait-slips with functional electrical stimulation compared to those without. This was accompanied by reduced step initiation time and a longer compensatory step (p < 0.05).
The application of functional electrical stimulation to paretic quadriceps following gait-slips reduced laboratory fall incidence with enhanced reactive balance outcomes among people with higher stroke-related motor impairment. Our results lay the preliminary groundwork for understanding the instantaneous neuromodulatory effect of functional electrical stimulation in preventing gait-slip falls, future studies could test its therapeutic effect on reactive balance. Clinical registry number: NCT04957355.
与健康对照组相比,中风患者的跌倒发生率高出两倍,这可能与反应性平衡控制缺陷有关,反应性平衡控制对从身体不可预测的扰动中恢复平衡至关重要。此外,运动功能障碍程度较高的中风患者跌倒风险更高,并且在更高的扰动强度下无法恢复平衡。因此,他们可能需要辅助剂来预防跌倒,甚至需要纳入基于扰动的方案。功能性电刺激是一种广泛应用于改善步态表现的临床手段;然而,目前尚不清楚它是否可以增强或干扰反应性平衡控制。
我们招募了 12 名有偏瘫中风(61.48±6.77 岁)和中重度运动障碍(Chedoke-McMaster 中风腿评估≤4/7)的步行参与者。每个参与者经历了 4 次不可预测的偏瘫步态滑动,以随机顺序分别有无功能性电刺激(在扰动后 50-500ms 提供)。考虑到支撑腿伸膝肌在防止肢体塌陷中的作用,选择对患侧股四头肌组进行电刺激。结果包括原发性(实验室跌倒)、继发性(反应稳定性、垂直肢体支撑)和三级(代偿步长、起始步、执行时间)指标,在两种情况下进行比较。
与无电刺激的步态滑动相比,参与者在步态滑动后接受功能性电刺激时跌倒次数更少,反应稳定性更高,垂直肢体支撑更好(p<0.05)。这伴随着起始步时间的减少和更长的代偿步(p<0.05)。
在偏瘫步态滑动后对患侧股四头肌施加功能性电刺激可降低实验室跌倒发生率,并改善运动功能障碍程度较高的人群的反应性平衡结果。我们的结果为理解功能性电刺激在预防步态滑动跌倒中的即时神经调制作用奠定了初步基础,未来的研究可以测试其对反应性平衡的治疗效果。临床试验注册号:NCT04957355。