Department of Physical Therapy and Human Movement Sciences, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL 60611, USA; Department of Kinesiology, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Greensboro, NC 27402.
Department of Exercise Science and Athletic Training, Ithaca College, Ithaca, NY 14850.
Gait Posture. 2024 Mar;109:158-164. doi: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2024.01.019. Epub 2024 Jan 26.
Individuals with chronic ankle instability (CAI) present somatosensory dysfunction following an initial ankle sprain. However, little is known about how individuals with CAI adapt to a sudden sensory perturbation of instability with increasing task and environmental constraints to maintain postural stability.
Forty-four individuals with and without unilateral CAI performed the Adaptation Test to a sudden somatosensory inversion and plantarflexion perturbations (environment) in double-, injured-, and uninjured- limbs. Mean sway energy scores were analyzed using 2 (group) × 2 (somatosensory perturbations) × 3 (task) repeated measures analysis of variance.
There were significant interactions between the group, environment, and task (P=.025). The CAI group adapted faster than healthy controls to a sudden somatosensory inversion perturbation in the uninjured- (P=.002) and injured- (P<.001) limbs, as well as a sudden somatosensory plantarflexion perturbation in the double- (P=.033) and uninjured- (P=.035) limbs. The CAI and healthy groups presented slower postural adaptation to a sudden inversion perturbation than a sudden somatosensory plantarflexion perturbation in double-limb (P<.001). Whereas both groups demonstrated faster postural adaptation to a sudden somatosensory inversion perturbation compared to somatosensory plantarflexion perturbation while maintaining posture in the injured- (P<.001) and uninjured- (P<.001) limbs. The CAI and healthy groups adapted faster to a sudden somatosensory inversion perturbation in the injured- (P<.001) and uninjured- (P<.001) limbs than in double-limb, respectively.
Postural adaptation in individuals with and without CAI depended on environmental (somatosensory perturbations) and task constraints. The CAI group displayed comparable and faster postural adaptation to a sudden somatosensory inversion and plantarflexion in double-, injured-, and uninjured- limbs, which may reflect a centrally mediated alteration in neuromuscular control in CAI.
患有慢性踝关节不稳定(CAI)的个体在初次踝关节扭伤后会出现本体感觉功能障碍。然而,对于 CAI 患者如何适应不稳定的突然感觉干扰,以及如何在增加任务和环境限制的情况下维持姿势稳定性,目前知之甚少。
44 名单侧 CAI 患者和无 CAI 患者分别在双下肢、受伤下肢和未受伤下肢进行突然感觉反转和足底屈肌感觉干扰的适应测试(环境)。使用 2(组)×2(感觉干扰)×3(任务)重复测量方差分析分析平均摆动能量评分。
组间、环境和任务之间存在显著交互作用(P=.025)。与健康对照组相比,CAI 组在未受伤侧(P=.002)和受伤侧(P<.001)对突然感觉反转干扰以及双下肢(P=.033)和未受伤侧(P=.035)对突然感觉足底屈肌干扰的适应速度更快。与双下肢突然感觉反转干扰相比,CAI 和健康组在双下肢突然感觉足底屈肌干扰时的姿势适应速度较慢(P<.001)。然而,与双下肢相比,两组在受伤侧(P<.001)和未受伤侧(P<.001)维持姿势时,对突然感觉反转干扰的姿势适应速度更快,而对突然感觉足底屈肌干扰的适应速度更快。CAI 组和健康组在受伤侧(P<.001)和未受伤侧(P<.001)比双下肢更快地适应突然感觉反转干扰。
有无 CAI 的个体的姿势适应取决于环境(感觉干扰)和任务限制。CAI 组在双下肢、受伤下肢和未受伤下肢对突然的感觉反转和足底屈肌干扰显示出相似且更快的姿势适应,这可能反映了 CAI 中中枢介导的神经肌肉控制改变。