4.6 Article

Preserved and impaired aspects of predictive grip force control in cerebellar patients

Journal

CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 116, Issue 6, Pages 1405-1414

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.clinph.2005.02.015

Keywords

cerebellum; grip force; hand; internal model

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Objective: To analyze preserved and impaired aspects of feedforward grip force control during cyclic arm movements with a hand-held object after cerebellar damage. Methods: We tested eight subjects with unilateral or bilateral cerebellar pathologies and eight healthy control subjects. Participants performed cyclic vertical arm movements with a hand held instrumented object at three different speeds. Results: Compared to controls, patients excerted increased grip forces. The minimum force ratio between grip force and load force was constant across all movement frequencies, suggesting that patients anticipated speed-related changes in load magnitudes by adjusting the grip force. Thus the scaling of grip force level to self-generated load magnitudes was preserved. The coupling between grip and load profiles was assessed by cross correlation analysis. Patients exhibited significantly decreased maximum coefficients of cross correlation implicating impaired anticipation of inertial load fluctuations. However feedforward control Could be preserved, as obvious from zero time lags of the maximum cross correlation coefficient. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that cerebellar lesions affect the processing of predictive grip force modulation in anticipation of inertial loads. Our results add further evidence to the theoretical concept that the cerebellum implements internal feedforward models. However, preserved functions may indicate compensatory mechanisms or extracerebellar aspects of grip and load force regulation. Significance: The observed dissociation of performance deficits may have direct clinical implication and may guide the development of individual therapeutic strategies for patients with cerebellar disorders. (c) 2005 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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