Kitchen Nick M, Dexheimer Brooke, Yuk Jisung, Maenza Candice, Ruelos Paul R, Kim Taewon, Sainburg Robert L
Department of Neurology, College of Medicine, Pennsylvania State University, Hershey, Pennsylvania, USA.
Department of Kinesiology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, USA.
J Physiol. 2025 Feb;603(3):663-683. doi: 10.1113/JP285561. Epub 2024 May 11.
The complementary dominance hypothesis is a novel model of motor lateralization substantiated by decades of research examining interlimb differences in the control of upper extremity movements in neurotypical adults and hemisphere-specific motor deficits in stroke survivors. In contrast to earlier ideas that attribute handedness to the specialization of one hemisphere, our model proposes complementary motor control specializations in each hemisphere. The dominant hemisphere mediates optimal control of limb dynamics as required for smooth and efficient movements, whereas the non-dominant hemisphere mediates impedance control, important for countering unexpected mechanical conditions and achieving steady-state limb positions. Importantly, this model proposes that each hemisphere contributes its specialization to both arms (though with greater influence from either arm's contralateral hemisphere) and thus predicts that lesions to one hemisphere should produce hemisphere-specific motor deficits in not only the contralesional arm, but also the ipsilesional arm of stroke survivors - a powerful prediction now supported by a growing body of evidence. Such ipsilesional arm motor deficits vary with contralesional arm impairment, and thus individuals with little to no functional use of the contralesional arm experience both the greatest impairments in the ipsilesional arm, as well as the greatest reliance on it to serve as the main or sole manipulator for activities of daily living. Accordingly, we have proposed and tested a novel intervention that reduces hemisphere-specific ipsilesional arm deficits and thereby improves functional independence in stroke survivors with severe contralesional impairment.
互补优势假说 是一种全新的运动偏侧化模型,数十年来对神经典型成年人上肢运动控制中的肢体差异以及中风幸存者特定半球运动缺陷的研究证实了该模型。与早期将利手归因于一个半球特化的观点不同,我们的模型提出每个半球都有互补的运动控制特化。优势半球介导平稳高效运动所需的肢体动力学的最佳控制,而非优势半球介导阻抗控制,这对于应对意外机械状况和实现肢体稳态位置很重要。重要的是,该模型提出每个半球都为双臂贡献其特化功能(尽管受双臂对侧半球的影响更大),因此预测一侧半球受损不仅会导致中风幸存者对侧肢体出现特定半球运动缺陷,同侧肢体也会出现——这一有力预测现在得到了越来越多证据的支持。这种同侧肢体运动缺陷随对侧肢体损伤而变化,因此对侧肢体几乎没有或完全没有功能使用的个体,同侧肢体的损伤最大,并且在日常生活活动中作为主要或唯一操纵器时对其依赖也最大。因此,我们提出并测试了一种新型干预措施,该措施可减少特定半球的同侧肢体缺陷,从而提高严重对侧损伤的中风幸存者的功能独立性。