4.6 Article

Individuals with Chronic Mild-to-Moderate Traumatic Brain Injury Exhibit Decreased Neuromuscular Complexity During Gait

Journal

NEUROREHABILITATION AND NEURAL REPAIR
Volume 36, Issue 4-5, Pages 317-327

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/15459683221081064

Keywords

traumatic brain injury; muscle synergy; motor control; gait; electromyography; muscle coordination

Funding

  1. Department of Defense [W81XWH-13-10081]
  2. National Institutes of Health [R25GM08325]

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This study investigated the neuromuscular complexity during gait in individuals with chronic balance deficits caused by a prior traumatic brain injury (TBI). The results showed decreased neuromuscular complexity in individuals with a prior TBI compared to controls. The individuals exhibited slower walking speeds, reduced performance on the Dynamic Gait Index, and altered control of the temporal activation of muscle synergies.
Background Synergy analysis provides a means of quantifying the complexity of neuromuscular control during gait. Prior studies have shown evidence of reduced neuromuscular complexity during gait in individuals with neurological disorders associated with stroke, cerebral palsy, and Parkinson's disease. Objective The purpose of this study was to investigate neuromuscular complexity during gait in individuals who experienced a prior traumatic brain injury (TBI) that resulted in chronic balance deficits. Methods We measured and analyzed lower extremity electromyographic data during treadmill and overground walking for 44 individuals with residual balance deficits from a mild-to-moderate TBI at least 1 year prior. We also tested 20 unimpaired controls as a comparison. Muscle synergies were calculated for each limb using non-negative matrix factorization of the activation patterns for 6 leg muscles. We quantified neuromuscular complexity using Walk-DMC, a normalized metric of the total variance accounted for by a single synergy, in which a Walk-DMC score of 100 represents normal variance accounted for. We compared group average synergy structures and inter-limb similarity using cosine similarity. We also quantified each individual's gait and balance using the Sensory Organization Test, the Dynamic Gait Index, and the Six-Minute Walk Test. Results Neuromuscular complexity was diminished for individuals with a prior TBI. Walk-DMC averaged 92.8 +/- 12.3 for the TBI group during overground walking, which was significantly less than seen in controls (100.0 +/- 10.0). Individuals with a prior TBI exhibited 13% slower overground walking speeds than controls and reduced performance on the Dynamic Gait Index (18.5 +/- 4.7 out of 24). However, Walk-DMC measures were insufficient to stratify variations in assessments of gait and balance performance. Group average synergy structures were similar between groups, although there were considerable between-group differences in the inter-limb similarity of the synergy activation vectors. Conclusions Individuals with gait and balance deficits due to a prior TBI exhibit evidence of decreased neuromuscular complexity during gait. Our results suggest that individuals with TBI exhibit similar muscle synergy weightings as controls, but altered control of the temporal activation of these muscle weightings.

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