4.5 Article

Children With and Without Dystonia Share Common Muscle Synergies While Performing Writing Tasks

Journal

ANNALS OF BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 45, Issue 8, Pages 1949-1962

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10439-017-1838-0

Keywords

Muscle synergies; Children; Dystonia

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [NS064046, 1R01HD081346-01A1]

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Childhood dystonia is a movement disorder characterized by muscle overflow and variability. This is the first study that investigates upper limb muscle synergies in childhood dystonia with the twofold aim of deepening the understanding of neuromotor dysfunctions and paving the way to possible synergy-based myocontrol interfaces suitable for this neurological population. Nonnegative matrix factorization was applied to the activity of upper-limb muscles recorded during the execution of writing tasks in children with dystonia and age-matched controls. Despite children with dystonia presented compromised kinematics of the writing outcome, a strikingly similarity emerged in the number and structure of the synergy vectors extracted from children in the two groups. The analysis also revealed that the timing of activation of the synergy coefficients did not significantly differ, while the amplitude of the peaks presented a slight reduction. These results suggest that the synergy analysis has the ability of capturing the uncorrupted part of the electromyographic signal in dystonia. Such an ability supports a possible future use of muscle synergies in the design of myocontrol interfaces for children with dystonia.

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