4.5 Article

Sensorimotor control of object manipulation following middle cerebral artery (MCA) stroke

Journal

NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA
Volume 182, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2023.108525

Keywords

Motor control; Hand function; Motor prediction; Object lifting; MCA stroke; Force production

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Methods for assessing hand function post-stroke are limited and not sensitive to subtle changes in everyday object manipulation. This research examined three components of object manipulation in stroke patients and found deficits in sensorimotor integration, sensorimotor memory, and modulation of distal forces. The study suggests that stroke patients may have specific patterns of deficits and that bilateral systems are important for skillful object lifting.
Methods for assessing the loss of hand function post-stroke examine limited aspects of motor performance and are not sensitive to subtle changes that can cause deficits in everyday object manipulation tasks. Efficiently lifting an object entails a prediction of required forces based on intrinsic features of the object (sensorimotor inte-gration), short-term updates in the forces required to lift objects that are poorly predicted (sensorimotor memory), as well as the ability to modulate distal fingertip forces, which are not measured by existing assessment tools used in clinics for both diagnostic and rehabilitative purposes. The presented research examined these three components of skilled object manipulation in 60 chronic, unilateral middle cerebral artery stroke participants. Performance was compared to age-matched control participants, and linear regressions were used to predict performance based on clinical scores. Most post-stroke participants performed below control levels in at least one of the tasks. Post-stroke participants presented with combinations of deficits in each of the tasks performed, regardless of the hemisphere damaged by the stroke. Surprisingly, the ability to modulate distal forces was impaired in those patients with damage ipsilateral (right hemisphere) to the hand being used. Sensorimotor integration was also impaired in patients with right hemisphere damage, though they performed at control levels in later lifts, whereas left-hemisphere-damaged patients did not. Lastly, during a task requiring sensorimotor memory, neither patient group performed outside of control ranges on initial lifts, with patients with right hemisphere damage showing impaired performance in later lifts suggesting they were unable to learn the mapping novel mapping of color and mass of the objects. The presented research demonstrates unilateral MCA stroke patients can have deficits in one or more components required for the successful manipulation of hand-held objects and that skillful object lifting requires intact bilateral systems. Further, this information may be used in future studies to aid efforts that target rehabilitation regimens to a stroke survivor's specific pattern of deficits.

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