Li Yiyuan C, Lemaire Koen K, Bruijn Sjoerd M, Brumagne Simon, van Dieën Jaap H
Department of Human Movement Sciences, Faculty of Behavioral and Movement Sciences, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam Movement Sciences, van der Boechorststraat 9, 1081, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of Rehabilitation Sciences, KU Leuven, Louvain, Belgium.
Eur J Appl Physiol. 2025 Feb;125(2):573-586. doi: 10.1007/s00421-024-05620-1. Epub 2024 Oct 4.
Vestibulospinal reflexes play a role in maintaining the upright posture of the trunk. Head orientation has been shown to modify the vestibulospinal reflexes during standing. This study investigated how vestibular signals affect paraspinal muscle activity during walking, and whether head orientation changes these effects.
Sixteen participants were instructed to walk on a treadmill for 8 min at 78 steps/min and 2.8 km/h in four conditions defined by the presence of electrical vestibular stimulation (EVS) and by head orientation (facing forward and facing leftward), while bipolar electromyography (EMG) was recorded bilaterally from the paraspinal muscles from cervical to lumbar levels.
In both head orientations, significant phasic EVS-EMG coherence in the paraspinal muscles was observed at ipsilateral and/or contralateral heel strikes. Compared to walking with the head forward, a significant decrease was found in EVS-evoked responses (i.e., EVS-EMG coherence and gain) when participants walked with the leftward head orientation, with which EVS induced disturbance in the sagittal plane. This overall decrease can be explained by less need of feedback control for walking stabilization in the sagittal plane compared to in the frontal plane. The decrease in coherence was only significant at the left lower vertebral levels and at the right upper vertebral levels around left heel strikes.
These findings confirm the contribution of the vestibular afferent signals to the control of paraspinal muscle activity during walking and indicate that this control is changed in response to different head orientations.
前庭脊髓反射在维持躯干直立姿势中起作用。研究表明,站立时头部方位会改变前庭脊髓反射。本研究调查了行走过程中前庭信号如何影响椎旁肌活动,以及头部方位是否会改变这些影响。
16名参与者被要求在跑步机上以78步/分钟的速度和2.8公里/小时的速度行走8分钟,共有四种情况,分别由是否存在电前庭刺激(EVS)以及头部方位(向前和向左)定义,同时从颈椎至腰椎水平的双侧椎旁肌记录双极肌电图(EMG)。
在两种头部方位下,在同侧和/或对侧足跟触地时,椎旁肌均观察到显著的相位性EVS-EMG相干性。与头部向前行走相比,当参与者头部向左行走时,EVS诱发反应(即EVS-EMG相干性和增益)显著降低,此时EVS在矢状面诱发干扰。与额平面相比,矢状面行走稳定所需的反馈控制较少,可以解释这种整体下降。相干性的降低仅在左足跟触地前后的左下椎骨水平和右上椎骨水平显著。
这些发现证实了前庭传入信号对行走过程中椎旁肌活动控制的贡献,并表明这种控制会因不同的头部方位而改变。