Abstract

The Journal of PhysiologyVolume 595, Issue 11 p. 3679-3679 Article updateFree Access Article update This article corrects the following: Spinal inhibition and motor function in adults with spastic cerebral palsy E. G. Condliffe, D. T. Jeffery, D. J. Emery, M. A. Gorassini, Volume 594Issue 10The Journal of Physiology pages: 2691-2705 First Published online: March 17, 2016 First published: 26 March 2017 https://doi.org/10.1113/JP273893 Linked articles: This article updates an earlier article by Condliffe et al. To read this article, visit https://doi.org/10.1113/JP271886. AboutSectionsPDF ToolsRequest permissionExport citationAdd to favoritesTrack citation ShareShare Give accessShare full text accessShare full-text accessPlease review our Terms and Conditions of Use and check box below to share full-text version of article.I have read and accept the Wiley Online Library Terms and Conditions of UseShareable LinkUse the link below to share a full-text version of this article with your friends and colleagues. Learn more.Copy URL Share a linkShare onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditWechat Following the publication of Condliffe et al. 2016, a participant with cerebral palsy (CP-7) was considered for re-diagnosis to Hereditary Spastic Paraparesis after her child presented with similar bilateral, lower-extremity spastic motor impairments. Motor unit (PSF) profiles during cutaneomuscular reflexes were not included for participant CP-7, but data for surface EMG responses were reanalysis of the surface EMG data with CP-7 excluded revealed that differences between the CP and NI groups remained significant. In addition, the association between spinal inhibition (I1max and I1ave) and motor function (GMFCS, FMSTOTAL and MVC) within the CP group also remained significant with similar correlation coefficients. Updated values for Table 2 are presented below with changes underlined. The original values are also presented for comparison. We also noted that there was a mistake in our transposition of some values for I1 onset and cutaneomuscular reflex termination which are also now corrected and underlined. Updated Table 2: changes underlined Reflex components CP NI P-value I1max −35.9 −69.5 <0.001 (Δ % BKD EMG) (−66.7 – 68.0) (−87.7 – −30.3) I1ave −26.1 −48.6 0.001 (Δ % BKD EMG) (−46.3 – 0.0) (−63.6 – −21.7) I1 onset (ms) 52.8 57.4 0.40 (40.7 – 76.6) (43.3 – 70.9) Cutaneomuscular reflex termination (ms) 292.1 290.4 0.90 (175.0 – 672.6) (186.8 – 449.1) Original Table 2 for comparison: Reflex components CP NI P-value I1max −36.1 −69.5 <0.001 (Δ % BKD EMG) (−66.7 – 68.0) (−87.7 – −30.3) I1ave −26.4 −48.6 0.001 (Δ % BKD EMG) (−46.3 – 0.0) (−63.6 – −21.7) I1 onset (ms) 58.4 57.4 0.98 (40.7 – 60) (43.3 – 70.9) Cutaneomuscular reflex termination (ms) 286 273 0.30 (89 – 825) (152 – 449) Reference Condliffe EG, Jeffery DT, Emery DJ & Gorassini MA (2016). Spinal inhibition and motor function in adults with spastic cerebral palsy. J Physiol 594, 2691– 2705. Volume595, Issue111 June 2017Pages 3679-3679 ReferencesRelatedInformation

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