Geed Lab

Neuroplasticity and Motor Function Recovery after Stroke

Impact of Targeted Assistance of Multiarticular Finger Musculotendons on the Coordination of Finger Muscles During Isometric Force Production


Journal article


Sang Wook Lee, Billy C. Vermillion, Shashwati Geed, A. Dromerick, D. Kamper
IEEE transactions on neural systems and rehabilitation engineering, 2018

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Lee, S. W., Vermillion, B. C., Geed, S., Dromerick, A., & Kamper, D. (2018). Impact of Targeted Assistance of Multiarticular Finger Musculotendons on the Coordination of Finger Muscles During Isometric Force Production. IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Lee, Sang Wook, Billy C. Vermillion, Shashwati Geed, A. Dromerick, and D. Kamper. “Impact of Targeted Assistance of Multiarticular Finger Musculotendons on the Coordination of Finger Muscles During Isometric Force Production.” IEEE transactions on neural systems and rehabilitation engineering (2018).


MLA   Click to copy
Lee, Sang Wook, et al. “Impact of Targeted Assistance of Multiarticular Finger Musculotendons on the Coordination of Finger Muscles During Isometric Force Production.” IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, 2018.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{sang2018a,
  title = {Impact of Targeted Assistance of Multiarticular Finger Musculotendons on the Coordination of Finger Muscles During Isometric Force Production},
  year = {2018},
  journal = {IEEE transactions on neural systems and rehabilitation engineering},
  author = {Lee, Sang Wook and Vermillion, Billy C. and Geed, Shashwati and Dromerick, A. and Kamper, D.}
}

Abstract

Neurological injuries often cause degraded motor control. While rehabilitation efforts typically focus on movement kinematics, abnormal muscle activation patterns are often the primary source of impairment. Muscle-based therapies are likely more effective than joint-based therapy. In this paper, we examined the feasibility of biomimetic input mimicking the action of human musculotendons in altering hand muscle coordination. Twelve healthy subjects produced a submaximal isometric dorsal fingertip force, while a custom actuator provided assistance mirroring the actions of either the extrinsic extensor or the intrinsic muscles of the index finger. The biomimetic inputs reduced the activation level of all task-related muscles, but the degree of change was different across the muscles, resulting in significant changes in their coordination (co-contraction ratios) and force-electromyography correlations. Each biomimetic assistance particularly increased the neural coupling between its targeted muscle and the antagonist muscle. Subjects appeared to fully take advantage of the assistance, as they provided minimal level of effort to achieve the task goal. The targeted biomimetic assistance may be used to retrain activation patterns post-stroke by effectively modulating connectivity between the muscles in the functional context and could be beneficial to restore hand function and reduce disability.