A longitudinal electromyography study of complex movements in poststroke therapy. 2: Changes in coordinated muscle activation

Journal article


Hesam, Negin, Trinh, Terry, Butel, Angelica T., Shiner, Christine T. and McNulty, Penelope A.. (2017). A longitudinal electromyography study of complex movements in poststroke therapy. 2: Changes in coordinated muscle activation. Frontiers in Neurology. 8(JUL), pp. 1 - 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2017.00277
AuthorsHesam, Negin, Trinh, Terry, Butel, Angelica T., Shiner, Christine T. and McNulty, Penelope A.
Abstract

Fine motor control is achieved through the coordinated activation of groups of muscles, or “muscle synergies.” Muscle synergies change after stroke as a consequence of the motor deficit. We investigated the pattern and longitudinal changes in upper limb muscle synergies during therapy in a largely unconstrained movement in patients with a broad spectrum of poststroke residual voluntary motor capacity. Electromyography (EMG) was recorded using wireless telemetry from 6 muscles acting on the more-affected upper body in 24 stroke patients at early and late therapy during formal Wii-based Movement Therapy (WMT) sessions, and in a subset of 13 patients at 6-month follow-up. Patients were classified with low, moderate, or high motor-function. The Wii-baseball swing was analyzed using a non-negative matrix factorization (NMF) algorithm to extract muscle synergies from EMG recordings based on the temporal activation of each synergy and the contribution of each muscle to a synergy. Motor-function was clinically assessed immediately pre- and post-therapy and at 6-month follow-up using the Wolf Motor Function Test, upper limb motor Fugl-Meyer Assessment, and Motor Activity Log Quality of Movement scale. Clinical assessments and game performance demonstrated improved motor-function for all patients at post-therapy (p < 0.01), and these improvements were sustained at 6-month follow-up (p > 0.05). NMF analysis revealed fewer muscle synergies (mean ± SE) for patients with low motor-function (3.38 ± 0.2) than those with high motor-function (4.00 ± 0.3) at early therapy (p = 0.036) with an association trend between the number of synergies and the level of motor-function. By late therapy, there was no significant change between groups, although there was a pattern of increase for those with low motor-function over time. The variability accounted for demonstrated differences with motor-function level (p < 0.05) but not time. Cluster analysis of the pooled synergies highlighted the therapy-induced change in muscle activation. Muscle synergies could be identified for all patients during therapy activities. These results show less complexity and more co-activation in the muscle activation for patients with low motor-function as a higher number of muscle synergies reflects greater movement complexity and task-related phasic muscle activation. The increased number of synergies and changes within synergies by late-therapy suggests improved motor control and movement quality with more distinct phases of movement.

Year2017
JournalFrontiers in Neurology
Journal citation8 (JUL), pp. 1 - 12
PublisherFrontiers Media S.A.
ISSN1664-2295
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2017.00277
Scopus EID2-s2.0-85025828912
Open accessOpen access
Page range1 - 12
Research GroupSports Performance, Recovery, Injury and New Technologies (SPRINT) Research Centre
Publisher's version
Place of publicationSwitzerland
EditorsC. Klein
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