Abstract
MRI techniques (diffusion tensor imaging and mDixon imaging) were used to obtain muscle volume, fascicle length, pennation angle, physiological cross-sectional area and curvature in 14 stroke patients (mean age 60 SD 13years) and 18 control participants (mean age 66 SD 12years). On average, the ankle on the paretic side had 11° (95% confidence interval 8 to 13°) less dorsiflexion range than on the non-paretic side, and 6° (1 to 13°) less dorsiflexion range than ankles of control participants. The medial gastrocnemius muscles on the paretic side were, on average, 15% (35.2cm3, 95% confidence interval 5.2 to 65.2cm3) smaller in volume than the muscles on the non-paretic side, and 16% (36.9cm3, 95% confidence interval 3.1 to 70.6cm3) smaller than in control participants. No statistically significant differences between paretic, non-paretic and control muscles were detected for fascicle length, pennation angle, physiological cross-sectional area or curvature. People with hemiparetic stroke and reduced range of motion have, on average, a smaller medial gastrocnemius muscle on the paretic side than on the non-paretic side. Other muscle architectural parameters appear unchanged.
Published Version
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