4.6 Article

Neuromuscular Control before and after Independent Walking Onset in Children with Cerebral Palsy

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 21, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s21082714

Keywords

muscle synergies; CP; electromyography; gait; early brain lesions; motor development

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [715945]
  2. Dutch Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) VIDI grant [016.156.346]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [715945] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Research suggests that children with cerebral palsy recruit fewer muscle synergies during walking compared to typically developing children. This difference is more pronounced in the high-risk group, indicating early alterations in neuromuscular control. Additionally, children with asymmetric cerebral palsy walking independently tend to recruit fewer synergies on the more affected side.
Early brain lesions which produce cerebral palsy (CP) may affect the development of walking. It is unclear whether or how neuromuscular control, as evaluated by muscle synergy analysis, differs in young children with CP compared to typically developing (TD) children with the same walking ability, before and after the onset of independent walking. Here we grouped twenty children with (high risk of) CP and twenty TD children (age 6.5-52.4 months) based on their walking ability, supported or independent walking. Muscle synergies were extracted from electromyography data of bilateral leg muscles using non-negative matrix factorization. Number, synergies' structure and variability accounted for when extracting one (VAF(1)) or two (VAF(2)) synergies were compared between CP and TD. Children in the CP group recruited fewer synergies with higher VAF(1) and VAF(2) compared to TD children in the supported and independent walking group. The most affected side in children with asymmetric CP walking independently recruited fewer synergies with higher VAF(1) compared to the least affected side. Our findings suggest that early brain lesions result in early alterations of neuromuscular control, specific for the most affected side in asymmetric CP.

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