Relations between knee and ankle muscle coactivation and temporospatial gait measures in patients without hypertonia early after stroke.

Relations between knee and ankle muscle coactivation and temporospatial gait measures in patients without hypertonia early after stroke. Exp Brain Res. 2020 Oct 15;: Authors: Chow JW, Stokic DS Abstract It is unclear whether muscle coactivation during gait is altered early after stroke and among which muscles. We sought to characterize muscle coactivation during gait in subacute stroke subjects without hypertonia and explore the relationship with temporospatial parameters. In 70 stroke (23 ± 12 days post-onset) and 29 age-matched healthy subjects, surface electromyography signals were used to calculate coactivation magnitude and duration between rectus femoris and medial hamstring (knee antagonistic coactivation), tibialis anterior and medial gastrocnemius (ankle antagonistic coactivation), and rectus femoris and medial gastrocnemius (extensor synergistic coactivation) during early double-support (DS1), early single-support (SS1), late single-support (SS2), late double-support (DS2), and swing (SW). Compared to both free and very-slow speeds of controls, stroke subjects had bilaterally decreased ankle coactivation magnitude in SS2 and duration in SS1 and SS2 as well as increased extensor coactivation magnitude in DS2 and SW. Both non-paretic knee and ankle coactivation magnitudes in SS2 moderately correlated with most temporospatial parameters (|r| ≥ 0.40). Antagonistic and synergistic coactivation patterns of the knee an...
Source: Experimental Brain Research - Category: Neuroscience Authors: Tags: Exp Brain Res Source Type: research