4.6 Article

Investigating Inducible Muscle Overactivity in Acquired Brain Injury and the Impact of Botulinum Toxin A

Journal

Publisher

W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.apmr.2021.07.802

Keywords

Adult; Brain injury; Botulinum toxins; Muscle spasticity; Rehabil-itation; Stroke; Upper extremity

Funding

  1. Ipsen Australia
  2. Australian Postgraduate Award
  3. George Burniston Cumberland Foundation
  4. Helga Pettitt Faculty of Health Sciences Postgraduate Study Award 2011

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The study revealed that hand relaxation deteriorated during repetitive movements in people with spasticity, but the deterioration improved after controlling for inducible muscle overactivity.
Objective: To investigate the pattern of change in muscle overactivity during repetitive grasp/release using dynamic computerized dynamometry (DCD; objective 1) and the effect of botulinum toxin A (BTX-A; objective 2). Design: Secondary analysis of an observational cohort study. Setting: Hospital outpatient spasticity management service. Participants: A convenience sample (N=65), comprising adults with upper motor neuron syndrome affecting the arm after acquired brain injury (ABI; n=38) and participants without ABI (n=27). Interventions: After clinical assessment, a subgroup of participants with ABI (n=28) underwent BTX-A injections as part of their spasticity management. Main Outcome Measures: Post hoc DCD data processing extracted the values of minimum force generation between 10 sequential contractions. The pattern of change was analyzed. Results: The ABI injected group exerted greater force at baseline than both other groups (ABI injected=1.04 kg, ABI noninjected=0.74 kg, participants without ABI=0.53 kg; P=.011). After the first contraction, minimum force values increased for all groups and were greatest in the ABI injected group. With subsequent cycles, the group without ABI showed a linear pattern of decreasing force generation, whereas both ABI groups showed a quadratic increasing pattern, which was of greater magnitude in the ABI injected group. After injection, values for the ABI injected group showed a 51% reduction in inducible muscle overactivity (P=.003) to magnitudes similar to those of the ABI noninjected group. Conclusions: This study showed that hand relaxation deteriorated during repetitive movements in people with spasticity, a feature hypothesized to adversely influence everyday hand function. After BTX-A injection, the magnitude but not the pattern of this inducible muscle overactivity improved. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 2022;103:75-82 (c) 2021 The American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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